Many rumps were shaking this past Friday night in Hollywood when a sold out crowd hit the Avalon. The club’s legendary dance night "Control" featured sets by three acts that Elektro is into, and that you should be into, too.

Hundreds snaked up two blocks in eager anticipation of the evening, which kicked off with an excellent turn by Australian DJ/producer Hook N Sling. Up next was an epic set by Dutch house act Bingo Players, who dropped samples by everyone from Flo Rida to Biggie to Pearl Jam. Stamina was the name of the game for this duo, as they played hours worth of soaring, futuristic and fantastically aggressive house, thrilling partygoers on the Avalon’s first level dance floor.

Up on level two, many bottles were being popped in the VIP section. Endless glow sticks were being tossed, lots of sunglasses were worn and there was much fist pumping. It was clear that everyone was having an excellent time, except for maybe the security guard, who, when asked who was playing by a girl in a leopard mini-dress and four inch heels, said to “ask someone who cares.”(It was Bingo Players).

The crowd cared. Almost everyone stuck around until the early hours of the morning to see Chicago-based trio Krewella, whose producer, Kris Trindl, sparked a killer set at 3am by yelling “Whoss ready to keep f**king partying?” The dance floor answered with a rousing "yes" in the form of wild cheering and booty-dropping.

Krewella’s stage presence was electric. The ridiculously beautiful sister singer/DJs Jahan and Yasmine Yousaf danced intensely while dropping dub-flavored hurricane house layered with an impressively vast selection of tracks, heavy on female vocal tracks. Feeding off the crowd’s clear affection for dub, (people literally started screaming when things got grimy), Krewella effectively played to the tastes by incorporating a load of dirty beats into the high-energy set. The trio seemed thrilled to be onstage, and the energy was happily contagious as they dropped singles including “Strobelights” and “One Minute.”

Back up in the balcony, girls were dancing barefoot and a few people were sleeping in the bleacher seats. While the crowd began thinning around four in the morning, a few mellow guys remained on the balcony, taking in the scene from above.

“It wasn’t until a year and a half ago that I had anyone to go to these shows with, “ said one of these guys, named Ken, who was up for the night from Long Beach, “now all of my friends like this music too. We come here all the time. I love this shit.”

We love it too, and Friday night was nothing if not a reminder of why, and how much.

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