Kaskade, Deadmau5 and more highlight the fest’s final night.
Nightlife
Alison Wonderland and Tiesto lead the massive dance music fest’s second night at Las Vegas Motor Speedway.
The world’s largest dance music festival returns to Vegas and everything is massive — from the three-story high, flame-spewing sculptures to stages the size of football fields.
The 300-capacity Sinwave fills a live music void in the Arts District with an anything’s-possible ethos.
Among the many, many big names who will be taking to the nine EDC stages: Deadmau5, Diplo, Illenium, Kaskade, Zedd, Steve Aoki, Slander, Seven Lions, Dom Dolla, DJ Snake, Sofi Tukker and over 200 more.
The new country bar and nightclub Stoney’s North Forty, an offshoot of Stoney’s Rockin’ Country, opens at Santa Fe Station.
The Triple Down has arrived at the Punk Rock Museum, which opened this year in downtown Las Vegas.
On a recent Thursday night, the new The Seance Room experience at Lost Spirits Distillery is underway, and things are about to get weird — or weirder, to put it more accurately.
If three days of dusk ‘til dawn electronic dance music with 180,000 or so of your closest friends isn’t quite enough, go ahead and breathe that sigh of relief now, as the EDC Week 2023 lineup is here.
The 12-hour marathon of music, interactive art installation pieces, food trucks, games, carnival rides and more will feature art cars, sound camps, and Burning Man veterans aiming to bring the spirit of that event to Las Vegas.
Gleaming with a largely gold-and-silver decor befitting of a walk-in jewelry box, The Theatre at Resorts World aims to set a new bar for concert-going lavishness.
Arts and entertainment venue will host live music events at its outdoor venue beginning in June.
The West Side Oasis plans to cater to celebrities and locals alike. Mike Tyson already has stopped by.
The colors pop like fireworks at the Rockstar Bar, one of first new clubs to open in Las Vegas since the pandemic.