Social Mixers
All kinds of people are into
Flosstradamus’s monthly
dance parties. The only
problem is getting in.
By Jessica Hopper
August 4, 2006
THE LINE OUTSIDE the Town Hall Pub
in Boys Town was filled with the
young and aggressively fashionable
last week, all anxiously waiting to
get into the packed monthly dance party
thrown by the local DJ duo
Flosstradamus. The bar’s proprietor, a
gruff white-haired man in a beat-up hat,
was parked at the door, barking “no” at
anyone who tried to hustle their way
past him. People sent text messages to
friends inside begging for help. After
standing in the same spot for 20 minutes,
a young bike messenger gave up,
announcing “fuck it” to no one in particular.
Even honchos from Vice Records
and editors from Pitchfork stood idly on
the curb, unable to schmooze their way
in, while a crew from MTV that was barreling
toward the door was told to queue
up alongside everyone else.
The sweaty throng on the dance floor
inside was pressed skin to skin and all
hands were in the air. There were hip-hop
headz, art-school weirdos, and
queer crews, an equal mix of ladies and
dudes of every race, and anyone trying
to cut through them met the tightest
squeeze this side of being born. One guy
tried to launch himself on top of the crowd and wound up spilling a dozen
people’s drinks. Two years ago most of
these kids wouldn’t have been old
enough to get into a bar; anyone older
than 25 was most likely an A and R rep,
a journalist, a publicist, or bar staff.
On a small stage in the corner, stationed
behind a bank of turntables and
laptops, were Curt Cameruci, aka
Autobot, and Josh Young, aka J2K. Rick
Ross’s “Hustlin” was booming out of the
speakers and the party kids were
screaming. A crowd surfer kicked a tile
loose from the drop ceiling and Young
quickly stepped out to put it back. The
MTV crew, finally inside, flicked on their
camera lights as Flosstradamus’s MC,
Kid Sister, in giant gold earrings and a
brace of charm necklaces, emerged
onstage with a mike in her hand. “How
y’all feeling?!” she asked, and the slick
bodies in the crowd hollered back.
Young, 22, and Cameruci, 25, started
hosting once-a-month events as
Flosstradamus last fall, and it quickly
became a full-time collaboration. The
two DJs routinely sell out every party
they play, have already cracked Urb
magazine’s “Next 100” list for 2006, and
recently hooked up with Biz 3 publicist
Kathryn Frazier, who booked them on
her agency’s stage at the Pitchfork Music
Festival and brought Kid Sister--who’s
actually Josh’s big sister, Melissa--to the
attention of her clients at Vice. “I see a
lot in them,” Frazier says. “I help them
now, and later they’ll buy me a fur-covered,
diamond-encrusted Rolls Royce.”
“We’d like to take what we’re doing
and turn it into a worldwide movement,”
says Josh, who now makes enough
money DJing that he was able to quit his
promotions job at the Metro. (Cameruci
willingly hangs on to his job selling
mopeds.) They’re heading out to the
west coast for a few shows next week
and are working on remixes for the
Eternals, Jai Alai Savant, and Walter
Meego, while Kid Sister is recording a
mix tape with Kanye West’s DJ, A-Trak.
She was also the draw for MTV, who
decided to include her in the upcoming
Chicago episode of My Block, featuring
West, Common, Lupe Fiasco, and
others. “I know Kid Sister is still about a
year out from a solid release, but she’s
got real star quality,” explains show producer
Joseph Patel. “Kids like
Flosstradamus are a new type of DJ.
They’re not going off records, beat
matching and mixing. They’re doing
mash-ups, playing unreleased downloads
and stuff off blogs, old stuff, newwave
records, and spitting it out from
their laptops. That’s why all kinds of kids
from all kinds of scenes are excited
about what they’re doing.”
Josh and Melissa, who’s 26, grew up
on the south side. She loved musical theater,
which rubbed off on her younger
brother; she once embarrassed him
while he was in junior high by playing a
tape for some of his friends of him
singing a song from Joseph and the
Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat. In
high school Melissa traded in her
Phantom of the Opera tapes for jukehouse
mixes and Casjmere singles, and
turned Josh on to them as well. “When I
was in college, in like 1998, I would be
up late cramming and Josh, who was
about 15, would call me and play me
beats, or music he was working on,” she
says, teasing. “He’d be like ‘Melissa!
Check out this freaky mix I did of J. Lo
and the Charlie Daniels Band!’” Though
her brother started mixing and making
beats at an early age, Melissa only started writing rhymes six months ago,
after Josh and Diplo, one half of
Philadelphia’s Hollertronix DJs, encouraged
her. “Her first song was bad--it was
totally an emo song,” Josh says. “One day
I’m going to leak that to the Internet.”
Three years ago Josh started DJing
around town as a member of Life During
Wartime. He met Cameruci, who grew
up in Michigan and moved to Chicago to
attend Columbia College, when they
DJed the same house party last summer.
They liked each other’s styles, and soon
started mixing together. In September
they put on their first event at the Town
Hall Pub, which they simply called
“Dance Party,” and it went well enough
that they decided to do it the third
Wednesday of every month under the
name Flosstradamus. With heavy word
of mouth the parties--originally called
“Get the Fuck Outta Wicker Park,” later
changed to “Get Outta the Hood”--started selling out almost immediately,
attracting the sort of crowds Cameruci
says would never be caught dead in the
bourgeois environs of a “club club.” Nick
Barat, who recently covered the duo for
the New York-based magazine the Fader,
says their early success wasn’t a lucky
accident: “There’s nobody else in Chicago
doing what they do, as well as they do it.
You can flyer all you want, but dance parties
only become successful through
word of mouth. It’s happening for
Flosstradamus because they know what
they’re doing--they have the acumen.”
Flosstradamus’s MP3-heavy sets are
always anchored in hip-hop, but last
week’s included plenty of mash-ups,
obscurities, and aesthetic curveballs.
They followed “Cha Cha Slide” with a
classic acid track from the halcyon days
of rave, while chopped-and-screwed
raps as slow as molasses were cut with
double-time juke tracks. It was a mix as
diverse as the crowd that came to hear
it. “We want everyone to be able to come
and feel welcome,” Josh says. “It sounds
corny, but we just want to show people a
good time. That’s our goal, and maybe
that’s why people are hyped on what
we’re doing. We got 1,724 plays on
MySpace today,” he adds, laughing.
“That’s ghetto gold!”  Send a letter to the editor.
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