Dragon Festival Experiment Offers Mostly Upbeat Results
- Share via
“This is experimental!”
That’s a common stance these days for Cypress Hill member B-Real, who shouted those words during the waning moments of his Dragon Festival on Saturday at the National Orange Show Events Center in San Bernardino. Master of hip-hop, then of hard rock and now high-speed dance music, the rapper has become an unlikely pop renaissance man.
He stood on a small stage Saturday, performing Cypress Hill’s “How I Could Just Kill a Man” and “Insane in the Brain” across the frantic beats of DJ AK1200, the result sounding a lot closer to drum-and-bass than old-school rap.
The Dragon Festival offered a variety of unexpected twists, from performances by such premier turntablists as the X-ecutioners and Mixmaster Mike to a quirky performance-art troupe of drummers and nearly naked dancers called Worms Union. An offshoot of Cypress Hill’s hugely successful annual Smoke Out concert, the nine-hour Dragon Festival was an intentionally smaller gathering, lacking Smoke Out’s star power (Cypress Hill, Limp Bizkit, et al.).
The closest thing to a big-name headliner on Saturday was Linkin Park, the latest entry in a wave of bands merging metal and hip-hop. Currently enjoying a radio hit with “One Step Closer,” the Los Angeles-based quintet offered a relentlessly thundering, pounding, screaming, scratching and screeching assault, tied together by an undeniable flair for melody.
It’s a trick still best pulled off by Deftones, but Linkin Park already outclasses such hyped, hit-and-miss combos as Limp Bizkit and Crazy Town. They played with clarity and overflowing testosterone, and without any words of violence or self-pity.
Not all the acts were as memorable. But earlier, the Beatnuts celebrated good times across spare beats and a hazy DJ mix that was just one step short of experimental.
More to Read
The biggest entertainment stories
Get our big stories about Hollywood, film, television, music, arts, culture and more right in your inbox as soon as they publish.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.