The Martinez Brothers have shared the full lineup for their Cuttin’ Headz takeover of London’s famous DRUMSHEDS next weekend.
The legendary NYC-to-Ibiza duo will celebrate 10 years of their massively influential label with on Friday, October 11, playing B2B with fellow tech house icon PAWSA in the industrial reclaimed venue’s 15,000-capacity “X Room.”
The Martinez Brothers and PAWSA will be joined in DRUMSHEDS’ main room by a collection of underground up-and-comers and label favorites, including London-based artists Chanel Carmichael and Max Dean, Italian producer and recent Cuttin’ Headz debutant Silvie Loto, and a B2B from veteran NYC selectors Jesse Calosso and Jean Pierre.
Over in DRUMSHEDS’ smaller 1,000-capacity “Z Room,” UK collective Unlock Your City will showcase its own curated bill featuring the minimal tech sounds of Manchester-based Cuttin’ Headz staple AJ Christou, fellow Northwest-hailing and in-demand trio Mason Collective, and London phenom Jaden Thompson, who in 2017 became the youngest person ever to release on Cuttin’ Headz at age 18.
The Martinez Brothers’ landmark Cuttin’ Headz celebration follows another massive summer for Bronx-born siblings Steve and Chris Martinez, who brought their third consecutive season-long residency at Hï Ibiza to a close last weekend, performing B2B with fellow underground hero Seth Troxler.
Elsewhere, they linked up with formidable party hosts like Solid Grooves, Brunch Electronik, Sónar Festival and ARC Music Festival, and will close out the year with even more anticipated appearances at Time Warp Spain, ANTS’ annual closing at Ushuaïa Ibiza, Amsterdam Dance Event, Circoloco’s NYC Halloween show, Miami’s Hocus Pocus, and more.
Cuttin’ Headz latest release, INVT and K-Lone’s collaborative Loca EP, arrived in July following Francis De Simone’s dual single “Cumbia / Cuatro Cuartos.”
Tickets for The Martinez Brothers present 10 Years of Cuttin’ Headz are still available here. For more information, visit drumshedslondon.com.
Featured image from The Martinez Brothers. Credit: Louis Nesbitt.