Outer Heaven presents: Alexander Skancke
About This Event
Alexander Skancke plays Outer Heaven, bringing sets that sit between dance-floor function and careful sound design, shaped by long blends and steady pacing. He is joined by Armii1n, Chouk, Dan Angelini, Harri Pepper, Krol, Lobe, Mulq, Orson and Tolga — DJs whose work likewise favors restraint, clear structure and gradual tension in the venue’s long-form, close-listening context.
About the Artists
Harri Pepper
Harri Pepper is a New York City–based electronic artist and DJ who performs at Outer Heaven, presenting live sets built from club-oriented electronics and hands-on sound design. Their work sits between DJ craft and live performance, shaping tracks in real time rather than relying on fixed playback.
Armii1n
Armii1n is a New York City–based electronic artist and DJ who appears at Green Room NYC, including live sets billed as “Life Of: Z@p,” “Baroque Hoe,” “320 B2B Connor Wrong,” and “Brutal Twink.” Their work sits in club electronics, built for close rooms and late hours.
Dan Angelini
Dan Angelini is a New York City–based electronic artist and DJ, heard regularly at Outer Heaven. His sets sit in the club’s darker, more functional lineage, built with careful pacing and a steady hand on transitions.
Krol
Krol is a New York City–based electronic artist and DJ whose work is shaped by club systems and late-night programming. They are a regular presence at Outer Heaven, including appearances around events such as *Outer Heaven presents: Alexander Skancke*.
Orson
Orson is a New York City–based electronic artist and DJ heard in rooms like Cargo at Dead Letter No. 9 and Good Room, where they present live sets alongside club-focused DJ work. Their recent bills place them in dialogue with Akin, Danilo Braca, DJ Spinna, Yu Su, JDH, Dave P, Ivan Berko, and Extra Andrew.
Tolga
Tolga is a New York City–based electronic DJ heard at Outer Heaven, where he has appeared on bills including “Outer Heaven presents: Aloqué” and “Outer Heaven presents: Alexander Skancke.” His sets move through club-focused electronic music with an ear for pacing and space, built for the room rather than the spotlight.