
He added, “Seeing people react to your mixing never gets old.”īe ready to dance when The White Panda takes the stage Friday, Sept. We know which tracks do the best with live crowds, and we’re going to play those ones every time.” “Every show is going to be different in some way, but there are definite commonalities. “We both run Ableton Live and have our mixes broken into their component parts ready to mix,” Evans explained. The White Panda has played at Lollapalooza, Bamboozle and Electric Zoo, toured with Wale and Ghostland Observatory, and shared the stage with Tiësto, Benny Benassi and Gym Class Heroes.

It’s kept us going for four years so far,” Evans wrote. “We’ve been fortunate enough to have fans that will go out and buy tickets to come see us.
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The two have been on a tear, serving up high-energy smashes on Versus, Rematch, Pandamonium and Bambooyah!Ĭheck out the mix-masters’ music, which is available for free download at. Maybe you’re tired of hearing an overplayed pop song from the early 2000s, but hopefully our mixes allow you to enjoy it again.” “And it should let you hear recognizable samples in a different light. When you hear it, it should sound like the song was written to be recorded and released exactly that way,” he explained. and was the first song we ever released it went to No. “‘What You Know About Little Secrets’ featured Passion Pit and T.I. “I can’t remember the exact mixes, but there was one with ‘Tiny Dancer’ and one with ‘Magic’ by Pilot that immediately drew me into mash-ups.”Įvans and Griffith, who have been friends since grade school, started spinning songs together in 2009. “Hearing Girl Talk’s ‘Night Ripper’ in high school was huge,” he wrote. It was Girl Talk’s mash-ups and digital sampling that caught Evans’ ear. “Finding one sample you want to use, like ‘Don’t Fear the Reaper,’ and then mixing it into a handful of combinations with songs of similar tone, cadence, key signature, etc., until you find one that really pops.”

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Usually, it’s a lot more trial and error,” Evans explained. “Sometimes you’ll get lucky and can just hear a workable mix in your head.

Or Dire Straits guitarist Mark Knopfler’s recognizable riff from “Money for Nothing” layered with LMFAO’s “Sorry for Party Rocking.”Īnd there’s “Boulevard of Heart Attacks,” which marries Green Day and Demi Lovato, while “Modern Reaper” reanimates the Blue Öyster Cult classic courtesy of The Knocks. Imagine Bryan Adams’ “Summer of ’69” and Swedish House Mafia’s “Don’t You Worry Child” melting into each other. “The challenge was to pull samples from all different generations of music and keep it appealing for everyone.” “We wanted this album to appeal to a larger audience,” Evans wrote in an email interview. Both don LED panda masks and use computers to blend music to make the public dance and have a good time.Ĭase in point: Bearly Legal, the mash-up/remix duo’s fifth disc released online in June. The White PandaSubjects are two 25-year-old males from northern California: Tom Evans uses the alias Procrast, and Dan Griffith is known as DJ Griffi.
