VANIC

Friday July 15th 2022

Harbor NYC presents: VANIC

11PM DOORS

Canada-based VANIC is bringing his forward thinking approach to bass to Harbor New York City, Manhattan's premiere rooftop destination featuring best in class sound, immaculate cocktails, incredible vistas, and more. With a plethora of massive records, both original and official remixes, and a series of large scale shows, VANIC has proven to be a must-see act for any discerning dance music patron. Tickets are on sale now.

Tickets and Tables at the Link!

621 West 46th Street, NYC 10036

  • TABLE MINIMUMS

    ANNEX TABLE $1,000 + + FOR UP TO EIGHT PEOPLE MAX

    DANCE FLOOR TABLE $1,250 + + FOR UP TO EIGHT PEOPLE MAX

    PREMIUM DANCE FLOOR TABLE $1,500 + + FOR UP TO EIGHT PEOPLE MAX

    CORNER BOOTH DANCE FLOOR $2,000 + + FOR UP TO TEN PEOPLE MAX

    VIP PREMIUM TABLE $2,000 + + FOR UP TO EIGHT PEOPLE MAX

    VIP PREMIUM TABLE $2,500 + + FOR UP TO TEN PEOPLE MAX

    OWNERS BOX TABLE $3,500 + + FOR UP TO TWELVE PEOPLE

    $200 + + FOR EACH ADDITIONAL GUEST

    info@harbornewyorkcity.com

DJ VANIC BIO

Vancouver-based electronic dance producer Vanic (aka Jesse Hughes) first caught listeners' attention with a string of well-received remixes -- including his reworking of machineheart's 2015 track "Circles" -- before releasing his own trap- and house-influenced tracks. Following debut "Samurai," he scored his first chart appearance in 2017 with Top 40 single "Too Soon."

Hughes began playing piano when he was three but grew bored with the confines of his classical training, and soon dabbled in jazz and ragtime piano while listening to metal and happy hardcore. In high school, he grew more intrigued with electronic music and began making his own productions. He started by remixing well-known tracks, and released his debut as Vanic -- a version of Taylor Swift's "I Knew You Were Trouble" -- in 2012. His career gained momentum with remixes of Birdy's "Skinny Love" and machineheart's "Circles," a pair of 2014 tracks that earned him millions of streams. Though Hughes attended business school at Simon Fraser University, he dropped out of the program to focus on music and saved up to build his own studio. More viral remixes of artists such as Lana Del Rey, Chvrches, Major Lazer, and the Chainsmokers followed, and Vanic signed a deal with Sony's Disruptor Records in 2016. That March, Hughes' first original track, "Samurai," was released; Good Things, a collection of some of his most popular remixes, arrived at the end of the year. Vanic began 2017 with a pair of original singles: U.S. Dance chart Top 40 "Too Soon" featuring Maty Noyes was released in January, while "Staring at the Sun" with Clara Mae followed in June.

In 2019, he issued a string of collaborative singles with the likes of Olivia Noelle ("Good on Me"), Saint Sinner and Wifisfuneral ("Forever Down"), Gloria Kim ("Save Yourself"), and Jocelyn Alice ("Cannonball"). ~ Heather Phares, Rovi

Get in touch.

For questions or information on weekly parties & events, reservations and packages, contact us here or at

info@harbornewyorkcity.com

or

reservations@harbornewyorkcity.com