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Bassquake Beginnings with Excision
Excision is a Canadian bass icon from Kelowna known for brutal low end and movie-like intros. Lately he has shifted from the Evolution era to the newer Nexus production, focusing on tighter sync and thicker subs. Expect a flow that moves from moody openers into chainsaw drops, with staples like Throwin' Elbows, Gold, and X Rated anchoring the arc. He may thread in older cuts like Virus for fans who trace his catalog back to the Rottun Recordings days.
From Shambhala to arena rigs
The crowd skews toward dedicated bass fans plus casual ravers, with rail regulars balancing earplugs and playful totems. You will also see veteran heads comparing yearly Shambhala mix IDs with newer fans discovering Subsidia Records highlights. Quick trivia: he co-founded the live project Destroid with Downlink and KJ Sawka, using MIDI guitars to trigger bass patches.Notes on what may change
Heads-up: the set choices and staging notes here are educated guesses, not confirmed details.The Basshead Scene Around Excision
The scene around Excision feels inclusive and curious, with strangers comparing favorite drops between songs. You will notice black jerseys, patched hats, and dino graphics nodding to Lost Lands, plus bright cuffs traded by kandi makers.
What people wear and carry
Rail crews move in waves during heavy sections, but mid-floor pockets give space to bounce and talk between hits. Chant moments pop on the countdowns and during Throwin' Elbows, while quieter transitions bring arms up instead of phones. Merch tables tend to feature Subsidia Records logos, retro X Rated artwork, and festival pins that fans treat like tour stamps.Shared rituals over status
Conversations drift to set lore, like which year had the nastiest Shambhala mix or which Destroid number hit hardest. It reads less like a runway and more like a meet-up of people who plan their year around big bass gatherings.How Excision Hits Hard, Musically First
On stage, Excision mixes with tight phrasing, letting kicks and snares breathe so the sub can hit hard. Vocals from collaborators arrive as crisp hooks, then get chopped into call and response against roaring bass leads.
Rhythm that leaves space
Arrangements often start in halftime around 140, jump into doubled energy with quick fills, then duck back to make the next hit feel heavier. The supporting team keeps synth layers clean so the center bass patch stays monolithic rather than muddy. A lesser-known habit is his use of keys like E or F minor, which sit well on big systems and make air move in the room.Precision in the low end
He also builds custom intros that tease motifs from later drops, so themes feel connected across the set. Lighting and screens follow timecoded cues, giving drum hits sharp flashes while long bass notes get slow sweeps and color fades. When he double-drops, he trims sub overlap and nudges tune choice to avoid clashes, so the blend feels powerful instead of chaotic.If You Like Excision, You Might Gravitate Here
Fans of SVDDEN DEATH often vibe with Excision because both lean into grimy textures and sudden silence-before-impact drops.