Epizode Festival opened its first year in style
Take a trip to paradise
Once Rayo had finished it was time for Maayan Nidam to play and as the second Perlon act we'd locked into, she didn't disappoint. Despite some technical difficulties with the vinyl decks, she managed to skilfully take charge of an extended set as the sun came up. Being a primarily vinyl-only DJ, the realisation that the equipment isn't up to scratch as you step up is enough to throw even the most talented selector off, but Nidam performed with a prowess and delicacy rarely seen on a festival stage.
Her set weaved between trippy techno and intricate house rumblers and it kept the audience captivated and interested throughout. Sammy Dee of course watched and danced on behind and it was a real treat to see Nidam perform on the Vietnamese beach. Considering she plays sets all over Europe with stops at Panorama Bar a regular occurrence, it was nice to experience this sort of set with the sun rearing its head in the background instead of in a pitch black room.
Now if there was one act that everyone at the festival flocked to see, and one that is synonymous with Russia's bubbling electronic scene it's Tyoma. Otherwise known as Artem Harchenko, the DJ and producer was a huge force in the creation and running of Epizode. He's almost somewhat of a celebrity at the event too, with people running over to greet him every few minutes and dancers making sure they were front and centre for his numerous sets over the two weeks. We caught Artem play three times over our 4 days and every single time we had a reason to smile and just as much reason to believe the hype behind the man.
We saw him play when we arrived on site for the first time to watch the sunset. His live show was the soundtrack for one of the most tranquil and picturesque moments of our trip. Ambient and sweeping electronica drenched the beach and at one point someone even likened the set to the film Gladiator on the basis of how 'epic it sounded'. We also saw him play after Claptone on our last night where he launched straight into a tirade of heavy hitting techno and party classics ('Flat Beat' by Mr Oizo was a particular highlight) but our favourite experience was at sunrise.
He took to the decks on Eggs Dancefloor at around 6am and played smooth, happiness-soaked house music, the perfect accompaniment to beach-side dancing. Our group of four, dressed in matching kimonos, back on the prosecco, lost our shit and his smile ear-to-ear was only matched by the ones we were brandishing. Theo Parrish's remix of Carl Craig typified a huge festival for Tyoma, a name we'll be firmly keeping our eyes on.
What track rundown would be complete without a 'hands-in-the-air' moment and Andrew Meller's tech house reincarnation of Underworld's 'Born Slippy' provided a few of those. With Trainspotting 2 now in cinemas, we joked as to whether this track getting dropped was some sort of next-level, guerrilla marketing campaign but we thought that too farfetched. Alas, on our first night, Edu Imbernon dropped the monstrous remix and it got an ok response but when Claptone played it on the closing night of the festival, it really went down.
The prolonged vocal that everyone loves a sing-a-long to was received extremely well and although the magic had been slightly lost to us the second time round, it still acted as the auditory relief that was needed after such a four-day binge of house and tech. And that was Epizode Festival, a brilliant first edition that once fine-tuned and its imperfections tweaked, will be a fine addition to the festival calendar.
January blues....cured.