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DJ Sandra Collins
From a humble start spinning hard industrial techno in the Phoenix
Arizona club scene, to headlining humongous events, Sandra Collins'
name has become synonymous with every major American dance music
scene and movement, beginning with her early days playing Frankie
Bones' seminal STORM raves in Brooklyn. Her residencies in Los Angeles
are themselves a history of that city's progressive dance music
scene: She was resident DJ at L.A.'s Sketchpad from 1992-95, and
shared a residency at L.A.'s Metropolis with Doc Martin and Taylor
from 1995-98.
Her popularity and reputation for bringing out the deeply emotional
side of progressive house and trance earned her a spot on the Electric
Highway tour with Crystal Method and Fluke. It also landed her,
oddly enough, in a Coca-Cola commercial. In 1997, Sandra released
her debut mix CD, Lost In Time, on L.A. trance label Fragrant, which
earned her both a nomination for "Best Electronic Artists" in the
San Francisco BAMMIE awards, and being named "Best Trance DJ" in
the 1998 Global DJ Awards. The next year, she made her production
debut with the 12" "Ode to Our"/"Red," which earned press accolades
as it sold out its first pressing in a single day. She followed
that up with her now-classic "Flutterby" for Scotland's Hook label,
a single so genre-defining it has shown up on such seminal progressive
house and trance compilations as Nick Warren's Global Underground
and John Digweed's Bedrock. Her success led to her moving to New
York in 1998, and soon she was spinning regularly at trance mega-club
Twilo alongside Sasha and Digweed, Paul van Dyk and Carl Cox. She
continued to play raves and clubs across the country, earning a
residency at Crobar Chicago.
Her ability to be both a crowd-pleaser and connect emotionally
with her audience won her the daunting opening night slot at Woodstock
'99. Spinning after Moby, she admirably held her own with a six
hour set in front of the 80,000 mostly-neophyte dance music fans,
and by the end of her set had by all published accounts won them
over. By the end of '99, she had been named "Best Female Artist"
by URB Magazine's reader's poll, sharing the title with Lauryn Hill.
Now with residencies at Chicago's Crobar and Las Vegas' Utopia,
Sandra is one of the progressive dance music's most in-demand DJs,
travelling to raves and clubs across the country and around the
world, from Little Rock to Lima, Peru.
Sandra has become an ambassador for American trance, which, combined
with her photogenic tomboy looks and lack of pretention, has landed
her on the covers and pages of every major U.S. dance music magazine,
as well as in magazines like Spin and Gear.
Now with Tranceport 3, Sandra marks the first time an American
(and woman) has been behind the decks for the genre-defining trance
series. Following up the global trance introduction of Paul Oakenfold's
Tranceport 1, and the deep, end-of-the-night vibe of Dave Ralph's
Tranceport 2, Sandra's installment turns up the emotions and lets
the melodies and beats pulse with a vibrance that's somehow both
introspective and anthemic.
Tranceport 3 is, like her life, a journey to places both brightly
familiar and darkly exciting, mapped out by progressive underground
anthems and new tracks of her own that point to the future of trance,
in America and the world. The journey, as always, is as much ours
as it is hers.
To contact Sandra for bookings email her agents at info@kineticrecords.com
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