Claude Vonstroke
house
Performing at:
See Claude Vonstroke live in Las Vegas. Get on the free guest list for every show — no cover charge, no ticket purchase needed. Includes free entry service from your hotel.
Upcoming Shows
Claude Vonstroke Las Vegas Schedule
Confirmed Claude Vonstroke dates at Las Vegas venues. Sign up for the free guest list on any date below — no cover charge.
New Claude Vonstroke dates are announced regularly throughout the season.
Sign up for the guest list and we'll text you as soon as new dates drop — no cover charge on any confirmed date.
Notify Me of New DatesAbout the Artist
Who Is Claude Vonstroke?
Barclay Macbride Crenshaw — performing as Claude VonStroke — arrived in the house music underground through an unusual geographic trajectory that shaped his musical sensibility before he had the language to describe it. Born in Cleveland, Ohio in July 1971, he lived there through sixth grade before his family relocated to Detroit — one of the most consequential possible destinations for anyone whose musical direction would eventually point toward electronic music. Detroit's position as the birthplace of techno and a city whose industrial decline and musical innovation happened in the same decades is not incidental to the aesthetic DNA of the music that emerged from it; the connection between the shuttered auto plants, the automation of manufacturing production, and the cold machine funk of Derrick May and Juan Atkins is not merely metaphorical. Growing up in Detroit in the 1980s meant growing up in proximity to the environment that produced techno and house, even if the direct exposure depended on which record stores you found, which radio stations you monitored after midnight, and which older friends had already mapped the city's underground geography. His path to house music's underground went through a period of working in television production and film before music became the primary professional focus — a background in visual media that informed his sensibility for presentation and the grammar of entertainment, and that placed his understanding of an audience in terms that went beyond the purely musical. The DJ reads a room and responds to it, but the producer and label owner who has worked in visual media brings an additional understanding of how an experience is constructed for an audience across time: how the staging of a moment, the build and release, the anticipation and its fulfillment, operates in parallel across music and film and why the mechanics of that construction transfer between forms. Dirtybird Records was founded in January 2005, backed in its initial period by his wife Aundy who gave him one year to demonstrate that the project was commercially viable — a constraint that focused the early work and the aesthetic choices in ways that absence of accountability rarely does. The first Dirtybird releases established the label's sonic identity immediately: a strain of deep house characterized by bass-forward mixes, minimal melodic content, a lo-fi aesthetic that stood conspicuously apart from the polished, maximalist production values of the commercial house music that surrounded it, and a sense of humor about the genre's tendency toward po-faced seriousness. Beware of the Bird arrived in July 2006 as his debut album — a document of the label's early aesthetic that demonstrated both the production approach and the distinctive vocal identity that would characterize VonStroke's output across two decades of releases. Bird Brain followed in 2009 as his second studio album, further developing the production vocabulary that the debut had established. The Dirtybird identity extended beyond music releases to its party format, creating an ecosystem around the label that functioned as a community rather than simply a distribution mechanism for records. The Dirtybird BBQ parties — initially a Los Angeles gathering format that later spread to other major markets — built the label's audience through direct experience of the music in a context that reflected the label's core personality: outdoor, informal, anti-pretentious, emphasizing the pure pleasure of dancing without the high-fashion nightclub status games, VIP hierarchy, and table service economics that surrounded much of the house music world at the time. This party format eventually scaled to Dirtybird Campout, a dedicated multi-day camping festival that drew several thousand attendees annually and established the label's live presence as a cultural institution in its own right rather than simply a marketing vehicle for record releases. The paradox of building an underground institution at festival scale — maintaining the anti-pretentious, lo-fi aesthetic of early Dirtybird while operating at a size that required significant commercial infrastructure — became the central ongoing tension of the label's decade of BBQ and Campout events. His 2016 designation as America's Best DJ in the Pioneer DJ and DJ Times annual poll confirmed his position in the American market specifically — a recognition that complemented Dirtybird's International Dance Music Award wins for Underground Label of the Year presented in both 2013 and 2014. Those consecutive IDMA wins marked Dirtybird's transition from cult operation to recognized institution within the American underground house world. The Resident Advisor community, which tracked underground house and techno credibility through listener polling and detailed editorial coverage, placed him consistently within its annual rankings as a significant figure in a distinctly American house tradition that the European-dominated underground landscape often overlooked or categorized imprecisely. His label's commercial success always coexisted with genuine underground credibility — an unusual combination that the Dirtybird aesthetic managed by refusing the production values and booking scale that would have required abandoning either pole. VonStroke sold Dirtybird Records in 2022, ending his tenure as owner of the label he had built from a one-year funded experiment into a recognized institution of American underground house music. The sale marked a deliberate artistic reset that moved him away from the community-institution responsibilities of running a major underground label and toward a more personal creative practice. Wrong Number Records, his subsequent label project, represents a conscious departure from the party-focused aesthetic of Dirtybird toward something more introspective and atmospheric — an April 2026 album arriving through Wrong Number explores the space between deep house and ambient electronic music, working with family members on vocal contributions and deliberately prioritizing intimate club settings over the festival-scale environments that Dirtybird's decade of BBQ parties and Campout festivals had established as the primary context for his music. The pivot is a late-career gesture toward what a DJ and producer chooses when commercial imperatives no longer govern the creative choices — the kind of artistic freedom that a successful label sale provides when used with intention. His Las Vegas residency at Discopussy — the warehouse-format underground club venue that represents Las Vegas's most committed and consistent outpost of genuine underground house culture on or near the Strip — places him within the venue that most directly matches his aesthetic identity in this market. Discopussy's programming philosophy, emphasizing properly configured sound systems, low-light environments over visual spectacle, and floor-focused programming over celebrity booking, provides the context for his track selection approach: patient, bass-forward, dark, building across the full arc of a set without the high-points-on-demand structure that commercial nightclub programming requires from its headliners. The themed nights at Discopussy — BEATSYNC, UNITY, PRESSURE — create a programming framework for the kind of crowd that shares his aesthetic commitments, an event structure that recalls the early Dirtybird BBQ ethos in a warehouse format rather than an outdoor setting. Guest list access through NoCoverVegas for Discopussy appearances. For the listener who has followed VonStroke's evolution from the Dirtybird bass-heavy party aesthetic through the Wrong Number introspective turn, a Discopussy performance in 2026 represents the current chapter of a career built on finding the meeting point between serious underground house aesthetics and the communal pleasure that makes house music worth making at all. The Dirtybird aesthetic he developed across those years occupies a specific position in house music's cultural map: American rather than European, bass-heavy rather than melodic, lo-fi rather than polished, communal rather than exclusive. These choices were not aesthetic accidents but deliberate responses to the landscape in which the label launched. The European underground — centered on Berlin's Berghain, Amsterdam's Shelter, and the festival circuit that connected them — had developed a set of production and presentation conventions that carried their own forms of exclusivity and status hierarchy despite their anti-commercial rhetoric. Dirtybird offered an American alternative to that hierarchy: music you could dance to at an outdoor BBQ or a warehouse party without the Schengen visa and the Berlin door culture that accessing the European underground required. This accessibility was not a commercial compromise but an expression of a different set of values about what underground music should do and who it should serve. The decade of BBQ parties that built the label's audience directly encoded those values in the format of the events: all-ages outdoor gatherings where the music was the point and the staging was minimal. The Campout festivals extended that philosophy to a format that added camping, communal meals, and a multi-day immersion that created something closer to a community gathering than a traditional music festival. His current Las Vegas residency at Discopussy — a venue whose programming philosophy descends directly from the warehouse party tradition that Dirtybird BBQ events occupied in their early years — represents a return to the values that motivated the label's founding, now applied to a market that has its own underground house community seeking alternatives to the Strip's dominant commercial nightclub format. The Wrong Number Records project that occupies his current creative period represents a maturation of the aesthetic commitments that Dirtybird encoded from the beginning, now freed from the institutional responsibilities that running a major underground label inevitably imposed. When Dirtybird was the frame for his work, every release and every performance was also a statement about what the label was and what it stood for; the Wrong Number period allows the music to exist as simply music rather than as brand communication. The April 2026 album under the Wrong Number banner incorporates vocal contributions from family members and demonstrates a sonic palette that has moved meaningfully from the bass-heavy party aesthetic of early Dirtybird toward something more interior and atmospheric — a sound that reflects the career stage of an artist who built his reputation on providing maximum pleasure to a crowd and now has the freedom to make music that provides something different. For Las Vegas audiences encountering his Discopussy appearances in 2026, the performance represents the full arc of a career that moved from Cleveland through Detroit through Los Angeles to the underground house community's highest profile and then chose to reinvent itself rather than rest on the institutional recognition it had earned.
Claude Vonstroke is a resident DJ at Discopussy, performing on Select evenings (BEATSYNC, UNITY, PRESSURE themed nights) on a consistent schedule throughout the season. Resident sets at Discopussy build a loyal following and often feature longer, more exploratory sets than one-off guest appearances — making Claude Vonstroke one of the most reliable live experiences in Las Vegas nightlife.
Claude Vonstroke currently performs at Discopussy in Las Vegas, typically on Select evenings (BEATSYNC, UNITY, PRESSURE themed nights). Their sets span house, delivering a sound that has earned them one of the most dedicated followings in the Las Vegas residency circuit.
The Experience
What to Expect at a Claude Vonstroke Show
A Claude Vonstroke set at Discopussy is built for the dance floor. House music at Discopussy creates a groove-driven atmosphere where the four-on-the-floor beat keeps the crowd moving for hours without jarring peaks and valleys. The sound system at Discopussy reproduces the warm basslines and crisp hi-hats of Claude Vonstroke's house sound with exceptional clarity. Expect smooth transitions, longer mixes, and a crowd that values musicianship over spectacle.
Claude Vonstroke typically takes the stage on Select evenings (BEATSYNC, UNITY, PRESSURE themed nights). Their sets run 60 to 90 minutes and deliver the full Vegas production experience with professional sound, lighting, and crowd energy that you cannot find anywhere else.
General admission cover charges for Claude Vonstroke shows are $15-25 (Discopussy warehouse venue). With NoCoverVegas, you skip the cover charge entirely and receive a free guest list entry from your hotel to the venue.
Venues
Where to See Claude Vonstroke in Las Vegas
Discopussy
Fremont East District
Downtown Las Vegas's most serious house and techno destination — Discopussy operates on a different frequency than the Strip's bottle-service circuit, and that separation is a deliberate design choice. The warehouse at 512 Fremont Street is built around the Void Acoustics sound system, a professional audio installation that exists to deliver bass frequencies with precision rather than volume alone. The disco-octopus centerpiece named Pus — 10,000 laser-cut components and 5,000 individually addressable LEDs — anchors the dance floor as both art installation and visual anchor for the room. Themed nights (BEATSYNC, UNITY, PRESSURE) create a programming calendar where specific communities return for the genre and the crowd rather than a generic open-format rotation common on the Strip. The 500-person warehouse is the optimal size for house and techno — large enough to generate crowd energy across the floor, compact enough that the Void system reaches every position with consistent audio quality. Open four nights per week, Discopussy runs the most consistent underground electronic schedule in Downtown Las Vegas. Regulars arrive early, stay past 2 AM, and trust the resident DJ roster to deliver programming that tourist-facing Strip clubs cannot.
Free Entry
How to See Claude Vonstroke for Free
Getting free entry to Claude Vonstroke shows in Las Vegas is simple through the NoCoverVegas guest list. Here is exactly how it works, step by step:
Sign Up on This Page
Fill out the guest list form below with your name, phone number, date, and group size. You will receive a text confirmation within minutes. The guest list is 100% free — no credit card or deposit required.
Get Your Free Entry
On the night of the event, arrive at Discopussy and check in at the guest list entrance. No tickets needed, no cover charge. Just give your name at the door.
Skip the Line & Cover
When you arrive at the venue, check in with the guest list host at the door. You will bypass the general admission line and enter without paying the cover charge — saving $40-75 per person on most nights.
Enjoy the Show
Once inside, you have full access to the venue including the dance floor, bars, and general admission areas. Claude Vonstroke takes the stage between 12:30 AM and 1:30 AM on most nights. Arrive early for the best positions near the DJ booth.
Pro Tips
Insider Tips for Seeing Claude Vonstroke in Vegas
Arrive Early
Doors open around 10:30 PM, but guest list entry is typically guaranteed until 12:30 AM. For Claude Vonstroke shows on Friday or Saturday, arrive by 11:00 PM. The venue fills up fast once the headliner takes the stage, and early arrival gives you the best position on the dance floor.
Dress Code Matters
Vegas nightclub dress code is strictly enforced, even on guest list. Men should wear collared shirts, dress pants or dark jeans, and dress shoes. Women should wear cocktail attire or upscale club wear. No athletic shoes, sandals, or overly casual clothing.
Group Strategy
Guest list works best with an even gender ratio. Groups with more women than men get in faster. All-male groups should consider adding bottle service for guaranteed entry, especially on headliner nights. For groups of 8 or more, contact us directly for VIP packages.
Use the Free Entry
The free entry service saves you $30-50 in rideshare surge pricing on busy nights. Plus, arriving by ride often means a smoother entry experience at the venue. Just mention it when you sign up for the guest list, and we will coordinate pickup from your hotel.
Same Venues
Also Performing at Discopussy
Similar Artists
More house DJs in Las Vegas
If you enjoy Claude Vonstroke, check out these other house artists with Las Vegas residencies. Free guest list is available for every artist listed below.
Explore
More Claude Vonstroke Pages
Holiday Weekends
See Claude Vonstroke at Las Vegas Holiday Weekends
Nightlife Guides
Las Vegas Nightlife Guides
Best Nightclubs Las Vegas 2026
Best EDM Clubs Las Vegas
Nightclub Dress Code Guide
Bottle Service Guide
VIP Tables Las Vegas
Free Entry Nightclubs
Pool Party Calendar 2026
Pool Party Dress Code
Pool Party Prices Las Vegas
Bachelorette Pool Party
Bachelor Party Planning
Best Clubs for Groups
Hotels with Nightclubs
Memorial Day Weekend 2026
Memorial Day Weekend Guide
Memorial Day Pool Parties
Memorial Day Nightclubs
EDC Week Las Vegas 2026
EDC Week Pool Parties
EDC Week Nightclub Events
EDC Week Hotels
EDC Week Free Guest List
Best EDM Pool Parties
Pool Party Season 2026
Dayclub Dress Code Las Vegas
Pool Parties for Groups
Pool Party Bottle Service
Free Pool Party Guest List
Wynn Nightlife Guide
Caesars Palace Nightlife
MGM Grand Nightlife
Cosmopolitan Nightlife
Fontainebleau Nightlife
Resorts World Nightlife
Birthday Party at XS Nightclub
Birthday Party at Hakkasan
Birthday Party at OMNIA
Birthday at Encore Beach Club
OMNIA Dayclub vs EBC
OMNIA Dayclub Opening 2026
Nightswim Las Vegas
Bachelorette Weekend Itinerary
July 4th Nightlife Las Vegas
Labor Day Weekend Las Vegas
Best Nightclubs for Bachelorette
Topless vs Nude Strip Clubs
No Cover Strip Clubs Las Vegas
Bitcoin 2026 Las Vegas After Parties
July 4th Las Vegas Nightlife
Common Questions
Claude Vonstroke Las Vegas — FAQ
How do I see Claude Vonstroke for free in Las Vegas?
Sign up for the NoCoverVegas guest list using the form on this page. We offer free entry to every Claude Vonstroke show at Discopussy. No tickets needed, no cover charge. You will receive a text confirmation within minutes of signing up, plus a free guest list entry from your hotel to the venue.
Where does Claude Vonstroke perform in Vegas?
Claude Vonstroke holds a resident residency at Discopussy in Las Vegas. They typically perform on Select evenings (BEATSYNC, UNITY, PRESSURE themed nights). Check the venue event calendar for upcoming show dates.
How much does it cost to see Claude Vonstroke in Las Vegas?
$15-25 (Discopussy warehouse venue). However, through NoCoverVegas, you can get on the guest list for free — saving $40-75 per person. Bottle service and VIP tables are also available starting at VIP table and bottle service available — contact venue for minimums for groups who want a premium experience.
What should I wear to a Claude Vonstroke show in Las Vegas?
The dress code at Discopussy is: Casual to street fashion. 21+ with valid ID. No strict dress code.. For men, collared shirts and dress shoes are recommended. For women, cocktail attire or upscale club wear works well. The dress code is enforced at the door — if you are turned away for dress code violations, your guest list spot cannot be transferred to another night.
What time does Claude Vonstroke go on stage?
Headliner DJs at Vegas nightclubs typically start their set between 12:30 AM and 1:30 AM. However, the venue opens earlier — Tue 10:00 PM – 2:00 AM; Fri–Sat 10:00 PM – 4:00 AM; Sun 10:00 PM – 2:00 AM. We recommend arriving early to secure the best spots and take advantage of your guest list entry. Sets typically run 60-90 minutes.
Can I bring a group to see Claude Vonstroke at Discopussy?
Absolutely. NoCoverVegas handles groups of all sizes for Claude Vonstroke shows. For larger groups (8+), we recommend bottle service for guaranteed entry and a dedicated table. For guest list entry, all members of your group need to arrive together. Bachelor parties, birthdays, and corporate groups are all welcome — just include your full group size when signing up.
Does Claude Vonstroke perform every week in Las Vegas?
As a resident DJ, Claude Vonstroke performs on a regular schedule throughout the season. Resident sets happen more frequently than headliner shows, often multiple times per month. Sign up for the guest list and we will notify you of upcoming Claude Vonstroke shows.
Is the Claude Vonstroke guest list really free?
Yes, the NoCoverVegas guest list is 100% free with no hidden fees. You save the full cover charge ($40-75 per person on most nights) and receive a free guest list entry from your hotel to the venue. We are an official promoter partner with every major venue on the Las Vegas Strip. There is no catch — our service is funded by the venues themselves.
Free Guest List for Claude Vonstroke
Get On The List
Free entry to see Claude Vonstroke live at Discopussy