Explore

Less is boring

List my events
Sell tickets online
Manage Guests Lists
Access control
Table Management
Automated SIAE ticketing
XCEED PRO
Audiodrome Live Club
Bloody Louis
Fabrik Madrid
Gare Porto
Input Dance Club
La Riviera
Pacha Barcelona
Razzmatazz
Sala Sonora
Spazio Novecento
Amelie Lens
Boris Brejcha
Carl Cox
Charlotte de Witte
Jamie Jones
Marco Carola
Michael Bibi
Nina Kraviz
Peggy Gou
Wade
Clubbing
Culture
Music
Top10

Business & Organizers

List my events
Sell tickets online
Manage Guests Lists
Access control
Table Management
Automated SIAE ticketing
XCEED PRO

Events

Clubs

Popular venues

Audiodrome Live Club
Bloody Louis
Fabrik Madrid
Gare Porto
Input Dance Club
La Riviera
Pacha Barcelona
Razzmatazz
Sala Sonora
Spazio Novecento

Artists

Top headliners

Amelie Lens
Boris Brejcha
Carl Cox
Charlotte de Witte
Jamie Jones
Marco Carola
Michael Bibi
Nina Kraviz
Peggy Gou
Wade

Nightmag

Clubbing
Culture
Music
Top10
Brand
Careers
Data
Help
Night Mag
Press
Privacy
Terms
Cookies
English
English

© 2025 XCEED

By SA LA REVE

Rexist #5: Cassius, Alexkid, Vanderkraft
Techno
House
Tech house
Underground
International
Rex Club
Paris, FR

Rexist #5: Cassius, Alexkid, Vanderkraft

Event finished

Sat 19 May, 11:59pm - 7:00am

Event's over, Rex Club awaits!

Line Up

Cassius image
Cassius
french house
disco house
Alexkid image
Alexkid
Vanderkraft image
Vanderkraft

About

- Rexist 5: Cassius, Alexkid, Vanderkraft - Cassius are a French duo whose real names are Phillipe Zdar and Hubert Blanc-Francart. Together they have recorded as Boombass and La Funk Mob, releasing singles on the ultra-hip French label, Source. If your less cool friends haven't heard of 'em yet, you could name-drop these lot: Neneh Cherry, Björk, Daft Punk, Air and Depeche Mode; as they've done remixes for all of them. The French invasion continues... Boombass grew up on the west side of Paris. His father was a top Parisian record producer, so it was natural Hubert would want to follow in his footsteps. "I started making music when I was 13," he shrugs. "But it was crap. So I quit" He got a job as a teaboy at a recording studio. By 1991 he had become a producer, was known as Boombass, and was working on MC Solaar's first album. Philippe grew up in the Alps, where he still returns every year to ski ("but not snowboarding," he states emphatically.) he landed a job assisting Hubert's father and studied to become a studio engineer. He met Boombass in 1988. The pair were both obsessed with hip hop, disgracefully fashion conscious and both fascinated by cool American films. A ten year friendship was struck. Phillippe became Hubert's engineer and a couple of years later they were production partners. The music they both started with was, of course, hip hop. Hip hop was both the catalyst that turned the teenage Hubert and Philippe away from elder brother stuff like The Police and the musical bond that brought them together. "We were into music before," they say, "but it wasn't our music. Hip hop was ours, it wasn't our parents' records." In between producing three hugely successful French albums for MC Solaar, including the minor UK hit "Bouge De La", they developed the abstract, proto trip-hop grooves of La Funk Mob. By 1994 they were busy breaking boundaries and messing up heads with La Funk Mob's seminal hip hop/funk/electro/weirdo-freak-out EP "Ravers Suck Our Sound". Meanwhile Philippe had discovered a new obsession, House music, and the last piece of the Cassius puzzle was falling into place. "In 1992 I went to a rave" he enthuses, "from then on I loved techno." Philippe had found an outlet for his new passion recording as Motorbass with Paris DJ Etienne de Crecy, the man behind 1997's Superdiscount. Together their Pansoul album remains one of the benchmarks of French house music's dynamic first wave, along with Daft Punk's Homework and Dimitri From Paris' Sacrebleu. Philippe talked Hubert into making a house track as a laugh. The result was "Foxy Lady" by L'Homme Qui Valait Trois Millards (The Six Million Dollar Man). The resultant slice of squelchy tech-disco became a standard for ever DJ from Andy Weatherall to Harvey. Hubert started to realize house music wasn't so bad after all. Cassius was born. "What we really like," say Cassius, "is heavy bass. We listen to Daft Punk, DJ Sneak, Tuff Jam, Masters At Work, 2-step speed garage, DJ Premier, Timbaland, Drum 'n' Bass. You might not hear it on the record, but it's all there." Cassius are both French dance music's missing link and it's old skool originators. The sound that combines the pop appeal, the heavyweight underground groove and the sheer brilliance of Air, Daft Punk and Dimitri. Their album 1999 is well-named - because that year will belong to Cassius. Believe it.

Dress Code

Casual

Doors open

Age Req.

18+

Venue

Rex Club

Rex Club

Club
Since its opening 30 years ago, Rex club has emerged as one of the driving forces of the Parisian scene. Located on the famous Grands Boulevards, next to the homonymous movie theatre, Rex Club is one of the clubs in Paris that has been able to truly manage and keep its authentic soul throughout the ages. Since the 90s, Rex was the refuge of electronic music lovers, counter-balancing with the mainstream Parisian scene. Laurent Garnier in particular, with his evenings Wake Up, was one of the craftsmen of the success of this mythical club. Rex club has also hosted all the greatest DJs, from Carl Cox to Jeff Mills to Kerri Chandler, Lil ’Louis, the Daft Punk, Justice and the entire French Touch movement led by Ed Banger and Pedro Winter. More recently, artists such as Daniel Avery, Oscar Mulero, Derrick May, Paul Ritch, Chez Damier, Anja Schneider and DJ Tennis have gone behind the decks of Rex. The music at Rex oscillates between House and Techno from Wednesday to Saturday, with DNB parties from time to time. The musical spectrum is quite wide but the line-ups are always top-quality. Short version: you will never be disappointed. The dress code is not enforced. No judgement. Come as you are and let the music take you with the flow. With Xceed, you can take advantage of promotions and even find early birds tickets at a rock bottom price. If you missed the early bird tickets, you can still buy your tickets online or bottle service with a priority access and skipping the queue at the entrance! Early bird tickets usually start at 5€. The price then increases to anywhere from 12€ to 20€ depending on the event. For a VIP service with bottle, the price is usually around 180€ for 4 people with soft drinks included. Rex Club is open from Wednesday to Saturday from 00h to 07h so if you are in Paris throughout the end of the week make sure to grab your dancing shoes and hit the dancefloor of this historic electronic landmark!
Rex Club
Rex Club
Rex Club
Rex Club

Address

Get directions

5 bd Poissonnière (3.32 mi) Paris, France 75002