Skip to Content, Navigation, or Footer.
Now playing:
On Air
Listen Live

Flux Pavilion Made Waves at the Maya Day & Nightclub, Turning the Pool Party Into a Rave

Flux Pavilion let the bass drop at the Maya Day & Nightclub, making for a fun event filled with iconic tracks and spirited dancing.

Known for his melodic crescendos punctuated by his rhythmic bass drops, Flux Pavilion had everyone's heads thumping and bodies jumping. Flux took the stage at 5 p.m. as an intimate crowd of fans gathered below. Even before Flux started, the crowd was lively. They cheered and let out “woos” as soon as he came to the stage. Fans could instantly recognize Flux with his signature ponytail and colored hair, this time rocking a coat of neon green. Before he started, he asked the crowd “How are y’all doing tonight,” to which everyone responded with cheers. At that moment, Flux knew that the crowd was ready to start. The set was filled with his signature blend of dubstep EDM mixed with pop vocals. Signature hits, including  I Can’t Stop,” brought the crowd together, as they put their arms around each other's shoulders and swayed each other back and forth to the beat.

(Pedro Rojo/Blaze Radio)

But you did not have to be at the center of the action to enjoy the show. Before the set started, Paris Rowden, an attendee at the show, sat by the pool edge closest to the stage. She swayed her shoulder side to side to the beat of the dubstep and house music set with a smile on her face, making it clear she was a fan of the music.

“I love Flux Pavilion…I just think his style of dubstep is really unique and energetic…It’s my friend’s first time here, and I was like ‘this is gonna be a mini rave for you’ because he’s [Flux] just so energetic, lively, a fun DJ to watch,” Rowden said.

(Pedro Rojo/Blaze Radio)

You did not need to be a fan of Flux Pavilion to enjoy the venue. In addition to the crowd in front of the stage, the Maya included a pool area that allowed fans and party goers to spread out in the shallow water or hang out along the poolside cabanas. Junior Torres and his friend sat at the far end of the pool away from the stage. At the edge of the water, they were swinging their shoulders from side to side before Flux arrived for his set.

“Genuinely with just general admission it’s a really good price. I think it is 100 percent affordable for like any college student, any Scottsdale resident, anybody visiting in,” Torres said.

The $15 general admission made for an enticing day out at the Maya. If you brought $30 to the club, you could get a ticket and enjoy a nice basket of their signature beer battered onion rings for $11.

If you missed Flux Pavilion’s show, you can listen to his new album titled “Doctor P & Flux Pavilion,” a new collaboration with British dubstep artist Doctor P.


Similar Posts