Gaiser has a super-hard-hitting techno sound that seems to work on large crowds. With beats this infectious there’s really no need for any event security until the end of the night when the club-goers come pouring out onto the streets in a sort-of blackout daze and need to be guided benevolently home after four hours of overstimulation and not-in-any-way moderate pumping, gyrating, grinding et cetera.
It’s telekinetic control; Gaiser enjoys immense metaphysical power in having complete command over the switchboard that will make 500 bodies move in unison and focus on nothing but vibrations and light formations.
Hailing from Michigan and having cut his teeth in the Mecca of techno that is Detroit, Gaiser’s grooves eventually fell into the hands of one Richie Hawtin who snapped him on his Minus label.
His live shows today, spanning the European continent from his current hub in Berlin, show the reverence that people fell towards a minimal sound with chilling, ethereal cutaways. His collaborations with Istanbul-based light-technician, Ahmet Said Kaplan, mean his live sets are a full-sensory experience.