Hippie Sabotage
Hippie Sabotage are an electronic dance music duo from Sacramento, California, consisted of brothers Kevin and Jeff Saurer.[1] They are well known for their remix of "Habits (Stay High)", which has surpassed 1 billion views on YouTube.
Hippie Sabotage | |
|---|---|
| Origin | Sacramento, California, United States |
| Genres | EDM |
| Years active | 2005–present |
| Labels | iHipHop Distribution |
| Members | Kevin Saurer Jeff Saurer |
| Website | hippiesabotage |
History
The brothers began working on music at the age of 12, focusing on hip-hop and creating beats for local artists such as Yukmouth. The name Hippie Sabotage was inspired by their fathers' initials H.S.[2] They initially started in the indie genre in 2005 and gradually entered the electronica genre. They continued to venture into creating hip-hop musical beats for Chicago artists like Alex Wiley and C Plus. They progressed into making electronic music, appearing at several music festivals such as Lollapalooza, Bonnaroo Music Festival and Electric Zoo.
Hippie Sabotage released their own material in 2013 with their EP Vacants followed by The Sunny Album in 2014. Ellie Goulding posted the remix "Habits (Stay High)" with the brothers and Swedish singer Tove Lo, which resulted in world-wide attention, hitting number one that year on Billboard's Next Big Sound chart.[3] They later released their third EP Providence in 2016 followed by their EP Options. That year, the brothers refused to exit the stage and assaulted a security guard after experiencing technical difficulties at What the Festival in Portland, Oregon.[4] In 2018, they hit one-billion streams and announced their national tour, Legends of Fall.
Discography
Albums
- The Sunny Album (2014)
- Providence (2016)
- Vibes (2016)
- Drifter (2017)
- Red Moon Rising (2020)
- Overdrive (2020)
- Floating Palace (2021)
- Trailblazer (2023)
Extended plays
- Vacants (2013)
- Johnny Long Chord (2014)
- Devil Eyes (2016)
- Options (2016)
- Hentai (2018) with Azizi Gibson
References
- Murphy, Tom. "The Sun Doesn't Set on EDM: Hippie Sabotage's Selfie Extravaganza and Gramatik's Expansion of the Genre". Westword. Retrieved 27 July 2016.
- Callwood, Bret (February 1, 2018). "Hippie Sabotage Are All About Love, Though Not Necessarily Peace". LA Weekly.
{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link) - "Hippie Sabotage". Billboard. Archived from the original on 2016-09-24. Retrieved 27 July 2016.
- "Hippie Sabotage assault security at What The Festival". Dancing Astronaut. 2016-06-21. Retrieved 2019-08-25.