{"id":610,"date":"2024-08-05T14:22:10","date_gmt":"2024-08-05T14:22:10","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/wetpainttools.com\/?p=610"},"modified":"2025-02-27T17:17:15","modified_gmt":"2025-02-27T17:17:15","slug":"how-sigala-is-transforming-from-radio-rebel-to-rave-revivalist","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/wetpainttools.com\/index.php\/2024\/08\/05\/how-sigala-is-transforming-from-radio-rebel-to-rave-revivalist\/","title":{"rendered":"How Sigala Is Transforming From Radio Rebel to Rave Revivalist"},"content":{"rendered":"
Hearing the bubbly, walk-on-air music of Sigala<\/a>, you’d never guess the first dance record he ever picked up.<\/p>\n That was a CD containing a Clubland X-Treme Hardcore <\/em>compilation, one of many that were instrumental in the popularization of hardcore techno, acid house, gabber and other heart-pounding genres after the series’ 2003 inception.<\/p>\n His formative years in music were spent immersing in the raw, unfiltered electropunk energy of The Prodigy and the ferocious drum & bass of Pendulum and NERO, among other deeply influential electronic acts. Now, after nearly a decade of painting dancefloors with the pastel hues of dance-pop, Sigala is diving back into the palpitating underbelly of club culture that once fascinated him as a young boy in England.<\/p>\n For those weaned on his many Platinum <\/strong>dance-pop confections, this evolution may induce whiplash. But for the nocturnal creatures who thrive in the strobe-lit chaos of the underground, it’ll feel like home.<\/p>\n Sigala’s shift, which his label has called the start of a “bold new era,” feels like watching a mad scientist in action\u2014delightfully unhinged and hungry for more. We caught up with the hit-making producer to discuss his next chapter and the “liberating” experience of making music for the rave in lieu of the radio.<\/p>\n