Candy Land was one of those nights where the music didn’t just play — it possessed the room.
Merlyn kicked things off by dropping an electro breakbeat that instantly transported you. The kind of sound that pulls old memories to the surface and flips a switch in your body. Before you even realized it, you were moving. He tapped straight into that raw, primal energy — no thinking, just feeling.
Then came DJ Baby Anne, and she shifted the vibe effortlessly. Her set was smooth and sexy, breakbeats laced with subtle hip-hop flavors. It was the kind of groove that wrapped around you, cool and confident, keeping the dance floor locked in.
DJ Icey followed and did exactly what he does best — rocked the floor. Smooth vocal breakbeats flowed seamlessly through his set, keeping the crowd energized and fully engaged. Every transition felt polished, every drop intentional.
Next up was Roni Size, who didn’t just play a set — he took us on a journey. Starting slow, he let the anticipation build before cranking it up and unleashing that drum and bass magic. Pure precision, pure power. He showed up with his A-game, as always. Roni Size never disappoints.
Closing out the night was Stereotype, and his drum and bass set was absolutely awesome. Just when I thought I was running on fumes, he sparked a second wind of energy. The rhythm pulled me right back in — bouncing, moving, fully locked into the beat until the very end.
