Duke Dumont Brings Union to Life

By Ryan Hayes

Duke Dumont’s sophomore album Union was written as a cohesive listening experience, capturing the beauty found in live events—an emotional imprint every music lover has felt. On Friday night, Union’s ethos was seamlessly translated into Duke’s live show. Duke’s production style has always hit especially hard in a live setting—sonically euphoric, washing over you in torrents of serotonin—and the Union additions only amplified the resonance of his set.

It was a night of deep, rhythmic progressive house guided by a piano backbone. Hypnotic and rolling, his set omitted (mostly) the bombastic, formulaic nature of the current flavor of commercial house. It’s the inescapable groove he infuses into his productions that mesmerizes fans, setting Duke apart from the herd.

Although it sounds obtuse to say when the event was held at the Forum and not a tiny club…there is a distinct element of “underground” surrounding Duke as an artist. His no-frills persona gives the music room to breathe and attracts an audience less focused on capturing everything on their phone. He’s never going to have the highest-grossing house tour of all time, but those who get it love him. His set was a masterfully curated love letter to his house sensibilities and the fans who hold his catalogue in reverence.

A moment of collectivism swept through the Forum as Duke transitioned into “The Chant.” Originally released in 2023 on For Club Play Only Pt. 8, the track is a standout on Union—steeped in unifying high energy, celebratory synths, and paired Friday night with black-and-white gothic church visuals and lasers that created peak raver escapism.

His set was bookended with blocks of original productions. He opened with two of his more commercial offerings, “Need U (100%)” and “Won’t Look Back.” The last 35+ minutes were pure peak energy: back-to-back originals including a slew from Union, finishing with the one-two punch of “I Got U” and his timeless masterpiece “Ocean Drive.”

The night was a vibes-based affair delivered in a tight package. The hour-and-a-half runtime stifled some of the creative freedom his three-hour Malkin Bowl sermon allowed. A slow build that ebbed and flowed was exchanged for higher production value and a much steeper tempo on-ramp.

Regardless of the format, Duke Dumont doesn’t disappoint. His set was cohesive, held together by the artistic vision behind Union. Rumor has it another album is on the way in 2026…whenever he’s back in town, I’ll be there.

Duke Dumont: House Music, Fresh Air, & Sunsets at the Malkin Bowl

By Ryan Hayes

Since 1934 Stanley Park’s Malkin Bowl has been hosting summer events and getting Vancouverites under the stars to experience live music. This year Blueprint is using the illustrious venue to extend long weekend vibes and chase away the post festival blues that will be stirring in house music fans after Foundation 10 Open Radius—the two-day event headlined by Purple Disco Machine & Fisher. Just five days later, on May 24th, Duke Dumont is set to bring club energy and festival ready choruses to the Malkin Bowl.

Over the last year Blueprint Events has focused on curated house music events covering the vast spectrum of the genre. Although Duke Dumont’s event isn’t Foundation Series branded it is the ultimate follow up to Open Radius. The storied producer has been active since the early 2000s—releasing house anthems like “I Got U” “Won’t Look Back” & “Ocean Drive” for well over a decade.

His debut album, Duality, released in 2020 with a contingent of tracks for house purists; “Therapy” & “Love Song” are sure to be highlights of his Malkin Bowl show.

The sheer power and perfection of “Ocean Drive” & the essential live music moment it will create should be enough to sell dance music fans attending…but if you still need convincing give his 2023 Red Rocks show a listen. It doesn’t disappoint.

To buy tickets - click here