How was the crowd in Barcelona and London?
Dom Dolla— I think it's really exciting. The shows are selling out really fast. I feel like this tour has been a real tipping point. The energy's crazy. We're doing really big rooms and venues and yeah, it feels amazing. Arriving in Europe — coming off the energy of the big American shows — it was a big contrast. Now, not so much. It's almost like the preparation and energy that I put into every single one of my shows is being rewarded across the board and rewarding for me personally. It’s fun because I get to play a slightly different style in Europe than I would in the United States.
How does your style shift when you're playing European shows?
I think stylistically, there's more of a heritage based around house and techno here, so I know people often come to my shows to hear the records that I've written, but I think you get to be a bit more adventurous and people are open to a bit more sort of — I don't know, there are a lot of like crate diggers in the crowd similar to me as a DJ. You see people like shazaming stuff and not to say that doesn't happen in America. It’s really exciting. As well, like the drums in UK and European shows have to be more constant, you can’t really have big breaks. They don’t translate as well. I like to keep people constantly moving, whereas in the US, there’s a lot more space for big euphoric breakdowns… people singing their hearts out, maybe that’s something to do with language barriers as well.
What keeps you energized?
For me, it's all about contrast, so if I've been playing a bunch of shows that are in one style for a couple of weeks, I'm like, Oh, I can't wait to do something a little different. So, you know, darting from America to perform in a different environment in Europe is really refreshing.That keeps it exciting for me as a performer and keeps the narrative exciting for people following online through social media. If you’re doing the same thing and playing the same shows in the same cities all the time, people will find it boring.
You've also had a great year with singles. How are you feeling after dropping “Saving Up”?
I'm very excited. I think for me, it's a bit different to what I’ve normally been writing recently. I can get bored in the studio quite easily and for this record, I drew from more of a Euro disco influence. It’s got this Euro offbeat baseline, the sort of heritage of old school disco sound, which I've never done before. So I'm just over the moon that everyone's still connecting to it on the same level to my other tracks.
I feel like it still sounds like me — my hooks and melodies always kind of shine through — but I was honestly quite nervous. I finished the record probably 12 months ago, and my record label was like, “Why aren't you playing it in your sets?” And I'm like, “Oh, it's hard to work in because I don't know whether it's something that people are necessarily expecting from me.” So, I'm just honestly feeling part elation and part relief.
Did you end up popping it into your set out in London?
I did, I did and the best thing was that the audience sang along to every word. It was amazing.