Life in Color is 12 years into throwing what it advertises as "the world's largest paint party." It draws major EDM acts, but judging by the 2019 edition of the inaugural fest at the RC Cola Plant in Wynwood, we get the feeling that organizers could book DJs from the bar mitzvah and quinceañera circuits and still lure the masses as long as the paint was flowing.
And the paint did flow — into the dripping hair of dancers, onto the cartoonishly large panda masks worn on the heads of some attendees, and all over the bare chests and legs of the many who were scantily clad. The paint was a hit, but the music was hit-or-miss.
The biggest miss involved NBA legend Shaquille O'Neal, who performed as DJ Diesel. Though this writer has fond memories of Shaq helping the Miami Heat win an NBA title, I would rather watch a marathon of his worst movies — such as Steel, Kazaam, and Grown Ups 2 — than
What So Not had the good fortune of performing next. The Australian producer's house music quickly got the dance-ready crowd moving. His tunes, traversing hip-hop, trap, and bass, were more melodic than Shaq's.
At a prompt 10:45, the headliner, Diplo, took the stage and began playing a snippet from Excision. The California-based label head of Mad Decent was the ideal party DJ for the Snapchat generation. If you didn't like one song he was playing, he didn't allow you much time to dwell on your distaste. He cut from dubstep to hip-hop to trap to pop while maintaining the same rapid beat. He skipped through the decades — from today with Kendrick Lamar to the '80s with A-ha's "Take on Me" to the '00s with Outkast's "Hey Ya" — all in the time it took to squeeze the contents from a paint container.
When the show was over at midnight and the pink-and-orange masses spilled onto the sidewalks of Wynwood, we had to wonder what those unaware of Life in Color thought of us. Did they think we were all working on a Wynwood mural together?