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Concerts

Felix da Housecat

These days, people like to pretend they didn't like electroclash at the turn of the millennium and that it's in general a blight on the illustrious hipster recent past. (Give it another couple of years and it'll be time for an electroclash "revival.") But for all that little flash in...
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These days, people like to pretend they didn't like electroclash at the turn of the millennium and that it's in general a blight on the illustrious hipster recent past. (Give it another couple of years and it'll be time for an electroclash "revival.") But for all that little flash in the pan's embarrassing haircuts and cookie-cutter songs about "the disco," some good did come out of it. First, it became cool for rock kids to dance again. But more important to the coming week at hand, a series of happy electroclash-era collaborations helped to pluck from relative obscurity the second-wave Chicago house great Felix da Housecat.

Indeed, for most current early-/mid-20-somethings, their first exposure to Felix likely came with his 2001 record Kittenz and Thee Glitz and more uneven follow-ups like 2004's Devin Dazzle & the Neon Fever. But he had a healthy career before that, DJing funky Chicago sounds from teendom. And in recent years too, he's thankfully crashed outside of the unfortunate electroclash label box. Last year's Virgo Blaktro & the Movie Disco was an R&B-infused, sexed-up romp that went criminally overlooked (perhaps it came just a little too early for the current crop of nü disco). His most recent artist album offering, He Was King, mines similarly icy but soulful future funk. For his DJ set at Liv, it's safe to expect a grab bag of all that is glamorous in four to the floor.

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