Return from the quiet
Pretty Lights is the Colorado-born project of Derek Vincent Smith, built on hip-hop drums, dusty samples, and glowing synth hooks. After a long break from the stage, he returned with a reimagined live rig and a looser, improv-first mindset. The show leans on deep crate flavors and patient builds that let grooves breathe. Expect staples like
Finally Moving,
I Know the Truth, and
So Bright, with older flips such as
Hot Like Dimes surfacing when the room leans warm. The crowd trends mixed-age: early festival diehards next to newer heads who found him through livestreams, all nodding in time and giving space for the drops.
A Color Map of the Sun was tracked with live musicians, pressed to vinyl, then sampled back into new songs. The
Finally Moving hook draws from an Etta James performance, a nod fans love to spot. Heads-up: the songs and staging described here are educated guesses based on recent shows and could differ on the night.
Crates, stems, and live spark
You can hear him blend custom stems with live drums and keys, letting phrases loop just long enough to tilt into something new.
The Pretty Lights Scene, Up Close
Color, craft, and shared notes
The room looks like a soft glow of vintage ski jackets, faded snapbacks, and hand-dyed tees, with enamel pins trading hands between songs. Many fans swap stories about Red Rocks runs and early warehouse shows, treating this era as a renewal rather than a reboot. You will hear that Etta James hook sung back in bits when the beat drops out, and a low P L chant when the lights dim for encores. Posters and small-batch merch lean on foil and galactic themes, and people compare prints the way crate-diggers compare finds.
How the night breathes
Circles open for dancing in slower pockets, then tighten when the groove turns heavy, with friends tapping shoulders to keep space kind. Conversation stays respectful and low, like a listening party with subwoofers, until a flip lands and everybody moves in the same pocket. It feels built by and for a community that values patience, texture, and the joy of a beat hitting just right.
How Pretty Lights Builds the Night
Slow-burn builds, punchy drops
Onstage,
Pretty Lights keeps vocals minimal, using chopped soul phrases as texture while the beats carry the story. The drummer rides a behind-the-beat pocket, letting kicks thump like a big-room hip-hop track while cymbals stay dry. Keys switch between Rhodes-style warmth and buzzy leads, often doubling the bass to thicken the drop without raising volume. Arrangements favor long, patient ramps where themes return in new colors rather than quick cuts; it feels like chapters.
Little choices, big feel
A frequent live tweak is retuning older cuts to fit new samples, so a familiar hook might sit a half-step lower and feel smokier. He also rebuilds drops by muting the kick for a bar, letting the vinyl crackle and crowd voice poke through before the floor hits again. Visuals lean saturated and reactive, but they track the groove first, keeping the music in front.
If You Like Pretty Lights, Nearby Stars to Watch
Grooves you might cross paths with
If you vibe with
Pretty Lights and his sample-led swing, you will likely connect with
GRiZ, who blends sax-led funk with bass and friendly crowd energy.
Big Gigantic hits a similar live-band lane, with booming drums and tenor-sax leads that scratch the same hip-hop itch. Fans who like grittier textures and punchy drops often check
The Glitch Mob, whose shows foreground chunky percussion and cinematic builds.
Shared roots, different arcs
If you lean toward extended jams and polyrhythms,
STS9 brings an instrumental journey that shares roots with the livetronica side of
Pretty Lights. All four acts favor strong grooves, pacing that lets melodies linger, and light shows that color the music instead of fighting it. The overlap lives in warm low-end, nod-friendly tempos, and a crowd that listens closely before moving big. Pick any of them if you want that same balance of heady texture and body-moving rhythm.