DJ ResidencyTechno

Nina Kraviz at Drai's Nightclub

See Nina Kraviz live at Drai's Nightclub in Las Vegas. Get on the free guest list — no cover charge, no tickets needed. Includes complimentary guest list from your hotel.

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About Nina Kraviz at Drai's Nightclub

Nina Kraviz holds a coveted Las Vegas residency at Drai's Nightclub, one of the most prestigious nightclubs on the Las Vegas Strip. Known for delivering unforgettable techno sets, Nina Kraviz's performances at Drai's Nightclub have become a must-see experience for anyone visiting Vegas.

Nina Kraviz typically performs on weekend nights (Thursday through Saturday), drawing massive crowds of EDM fans and nightlife enthusiasts. The state-of-the-art sound system and immersive lighting at Drai's Nightclub provide the perfect backdrop for Nina Kraviz's high-energy performances.

As a resident artist, Nina Kraviz performs multiple dates throughout the year at Drai's Nightclub. Each show features a unique setlist and production elements that make every night different. Whether you're a longtime fan or experiencing Nina Kraviz live for the first time, a night at Drai's Nightclubis an experience you won't forget.

Nina Kraviz emerged from Irkutsk, a Siberian city more than five thousand kilometers from Moscow where the cultural isolation of the Soviet and post-Soviet periods created conditions for discovering music through whatever transmissions and imports arrived. Albums by Led Zeppelin and Pink Floyd landed first in her musical education, then acid house, Detroit techno, Chicago house, IDM, ambient, and obscure electronica filtered through by the time she reached her teenage years. Her early musical self-education in Irkutsk was therefore a self-directed archaeology — finding the threads of electronic music history through vinyl and broadcasts rather than through proximity to the communities that made that music, building an understanding of what connected Derrick May's string-laden techno to Aphex Twin's decomposed structures to the acidic squelch of the Roland TB-303 acid bassline synthesizer. This geographic distance from the sources of the music she was absorbing proved generative rather than limiting: having to reconstruct the logic of electronic music from scattered artifacts rather than received community wisdom produced a DJ whose relationship to genre is analytical rather than devotional. She moved to Moscow to study dentistry, completing her degree in the field before music overtook her professional trajectory entirely. The dental training was not incidental — the precision required in medicine and the patience required in oral surgery are qualities that translate directly to the kind of careful, long-form DJing that characterizes her most acclaimed performances. By the mid-2000s she was running a club night at the Propaganda Club in Moscow, one of the city's central underground venues for electronic music that had built its reputation across the post-Soviet years as a gathering point for the alternative communities that existed in the spaces adjacent to mainstream Russian cultural life. Radio preceded the club work: hosting a show in Irkutsk was her first public platform, and the ability to curate a sequence of records for a listening audience translated directly to the DJ technique she developed through those years of programming for an unseen room. The Red Bull Music Academy represents a formative moment in her development that almost did not happen through bureaucratic accident. Accepted to the 2005 edition in Seattle, she was unable to obtain the visa required to enter the United States — a bureaucratic barrier that rerouted her to the following year's edition in Melbourne, Australia, in 2006. The RBMA gathered producers and DJs selected from applicants worldwide for an intensive period of collaboration, lectures, and studio sessions with visiting artists whose own careers spanned the breadth of electronic music's historical development; alumni of the program account for a significant proportion of the artists who defined the last two decades of the form across genres and national contexts. Kraviz's participation placed her within that network at the formative stage of her career, and the Melbourne context exposed her to producers from the Australian electronic scene whose aesthetic occupied a different position from the European techno circuit she would come to inhabit. Her debut album on Rekids arrived in February 2012 under her own name — a self-titled statement that established both her production voice and her refusal to operate within genre conventions that would have been commercially safer. The enduring track from that record, Ghetto Kraviz, demonstrated the approach that would characterize her most recognized work: a vocal delivery that operates somewhere between spoken and sung, a bassline architecture borrowed from house but processed through a sensibility closer to industrial noise, and a structural patience that allows a single idea to develop across the duration of a track without the resolution mechanics or drop-build cycles that define commercial club production. The album received mixed-positive critical reception that often acknowledged the originality while noting the deliberate difficulty of its listening experience — Kraviz has never appeared interested in accessibility as an artistic goal. Her трип (Trip) label launched in December 2014, inaugurated by The Deviant Octopus, a double-sided EP that introduced the label's scope immediately through the range of artists it gathered: Terrence Dixon — a Detroit techno producer of the original Underground Resistance generation whose influence on the aesthetics Kraviz most admires is direct and traceable — appeared alongside Bjarki, Nikita Zabelin, PTU, and Roma Zuckerman. The label established its character as a platform for music that sits at the intersection of techno's functional dance-floor requirements and more experimental structural tendencies, releasing work that tracks the overlap between techno's industrial heritage and the more anarchic traditions of acid, noise, and EBM. Trip is not a techno label that releases what a mainstream promoter would call techno — it is a label for music that techno's most serious practitioners make when they are reaching for something the genre's established conventions cannot accommodate, and that distinction is perceptible in every release it has put forward since its founding. Her DJ profile grew substantially through a series of Boiler Room performances that became reference points in the online circulation of DJ footage that defines contemporary global reach for artists whose physical touring cannot cover the full breadth of their potential audience. The uninterrupted camera format that Boiler Room pioneered strips the mystique from the DJ's performance and exposes the technical execution directly to a viewer who can pause, rewind, and scrutinize — and Kraviz's sets in that format demonstrated a mixing precision and track selection depth that expanded her audience to listeners who had not encountered her through the physical club circuit in Berlin, Amsterdam, or London where her reputation had originally been built. Techno's gatekeeping had historically been enforced through club culture and the social hierarchies of the European festival circuit; the internet allowed a different kind of discovery, and her Resident Advisor podcast series and streaming mixes circulated to audiences who encountered them independent of the specific club contexts in which her live reputation had been established. In the Las Vegas context, her appearances at Drai's Nightclub and Zouk Nightclub deploy the same aesthetic commitments — technical precision, track selection depth, structural patience, refusal of commercial shortcuts — within venues whose scale and commercial context differ substantially from the underground clubs that established her international reputation. Drai's Nightclub at The Vanderpump Hotel operates as one of the Strip's primary hip-hop and urban nightlife venues that also books electronic artists for special event programming when the booking serves the venue's interest in cross-demographic appeal; the contrast between Drai's dominant programming aesthetic and Kraviz's underground techno identity creates a specific kind of event character that draws an audience from both communities. Zouk Nightclub at Resorts World Las Vegas represents a different context — a purpose-built nightclub designed specifically for electronic music programming with technical production infrastructure, including high-end sound system components and sight lines engineered for DJ-forward bookings, that matches the demands of artists working in the serious end of the techno and house spectrum. Guest list registration through NoCoverVegas covers both Drai's and Zouk appearances, providing free entry access for qualifying guests. The contrast between the underground warehouse environments where Trip label releases are most naturally heard and the Las Vegas Strip venues where Kraviz performs reflects the career trajectory of artists who build their reputation in the underground and are eventually claimed by the commercial circuit on their own aesthetic terms — a trajectory that validates the original work without requiring it to change. The technical demands of techno DJing at the level Kraviz operates — precise beatmatching across tracks whose tempos resist the normalization that quantized, producer-software-generated tracks allow, reading the transitions between records as compositional decisions rather than technical necessities, maintaining the tension between a set's internal logic and the crowd's real-time physical response — are invisible to most club audiences in the way that athletic technique is invisible to sports fans who can see the results but not the mechanics. Her sets at Boiler Room, documented in the uncut footage that became reference material for younger DJs and producers, reveal the technical decision-making that underlies the impression of inevitability her transitions create: the choice of which track to play against which, the precise moment to begin mixing, the use of EQ to hollow out frequencies in the outgoing track before the incoming one fills them, the management of crowd energy across a four or six-hour set without the artificial peaks that festival formats and commercial nightclub bookings typically require. This technical depth is what distinguishes her from DJs who have built audiences on personality, biography, or production celebrity rather than the craft of the live performance itself. In the Las Vegas context, her Zouk Nightclub appearances particularly benefit from the venue's technical production infrastructure — a sound system designed for the precision mixing that her approach demands and a room configured for the kind of listening attention that separates serious techno audiences from general clubbing crowds. Understanding what Kraviz's Las Vegas appearances mean for the Strip's electronic music landscape requires understanding where techno's most serious practitioners fit within the commercial nightclub ecosystem. Las Vegas nightclub programming has historically prioritized EDM headliners whose production work crosses into mainstream pop — DJs whose sets are optimized for large crowds moving through programmed high points rather than the sustained floor-focused tension that serious techno requires. Kraviz's bookings at Drai's and Zouk represent the Strip's engagement with the more demanding end of the electronic music spectrum: artists whose international reputations are built on underground credibility and technical depth rather than on chart success or streaming numbers, and whose appearance at Las Vegas venues signals that the market for serious electronic music programming extends to the Strip audience. The Trip label releases she promotes through her DJ sets — including work from Bjarki, whose contribution to the techno underground across the period of Trip's existence has made him one of the label's most significant voices — represent the forward edge of the genre as practiced by artists who are not making music for the Las Vegas Strip but whose music ends up heard there because the Strip's most serious venues have begun programming the artists who make it.

As a resident DJ at Drai's Nightclub, Nina Kraviz performs regularly throughout the season, giving you multiple chances to catch a set. Resident nights tend to be slightly less crowded than headliner events, making them an excellent choice for first-time visitors who want a premium experience without the peak-night intensity. The free guest list is almost always honored on resident nights.

Similar Venues

More EDM & Electronic Venues in Las Vegas

Nina Kraviz's techno sound fits naturally at these Vegas venues. Each one hosts resident DJs with a similar sound profile — free guest list available at all of them.

Drai's Nightclub — Venue Details

Location

The Vanderpump Hotel — Basement (formerly The Cromwell)

3595 S Las Vegas Blvd, Las Vegas, NV 89109

Hours

Thu–Sun, 1:00 AM – 7:00 AM

Dress Code

Upscale nightclub attire. No athletic wear, hats, or sandals for men. 21+ with valid photo ID.

Cover Charge

Normally $40-60 cover — FREE with NoCoverVegas guest list (or $99 all-inclusive VIP with open bar)

Schedule

See Nina Kraviz at Drai's Nightclub by Month

No individual Nina Kraviz dates at Drai's Nightclub are confirmed yet. Performance dates are announced on a rolling basis — sign up for the guest list and we'll text you the moment a new date is confirmed.

How to Get In Free to See Nina Kraviz

Vegas nightlife can be expensive, but it doesn't have to be. The NoCoverVegas guest list gets you into Drai's Nightclub to see Nina Kraviz completely free — no cover charge, no ticket purchase, no hidden fees.

Guest List Steps

  1. 1Sign up using the form below with your name, phone number, group size, and date.
  2. 2Receive an instant text confirmation with your guest list details and a free guest list entry offer.
  3. 3Arrive at Drai's Nightclub before 12:30 AM and check in at the guest list entrance. You're in — free.

Arrival Tips

  • Arrive early. Get there between 10:30 PM and 12:30 AM for guaranteed guest list entry. After 12:30 AM, you may need to pay cover.
  • Bring your group together. Your entire group must arrive and check in at the same time. An even or better female-to-male ratio is recommended.
  • Dress the part. Upscale nightclub attire. No athletic wear, hats, or sandals for men. 21+ with valid photo ID.Don't risk getting turned away for dress code violations.
  • Take the free entry. We offer free entry service from your hotel. No Uber surge pricing, no parking fees.

Other DJs at Drai's Nightclub

Drai's Nightclub hosts dozens of world-class artists. Here are more resident DJs you can see with our free guest list.

Frequently Asked Questions

When does Nina Kraviz perform at Drai's Nightclub?

Nina Kraviz holds a residency at Drai's Nightclub and typically performs on weekend nights (Thursday through Saturday). Exact dates for each performance are announced on a rolling basis, usually 2-4 weeks in advance. The best way to stay updated is to sign up for the NoCoverVegas free guest list — we'll text you a confirmation with all the details including your check-in time. Doors typically open at 10:30 PM with the main set starting around midnight and running until 4:00 AM.

How much does it cost to see Nina Kraviz at Drai's Nightclub?

General admission to see Nina Kraviz at Drai's Nightclub typically costs Normally $40-60 cover — FREE with NoCoverVegas guest list (or $99 all-inclusive VIP with open bar) at the door, and prices increase on holidays and special event weekends. However, with the NoCoverVegas guest list, you can skip the cover entirely. Women receive free entry all night. Men get free entry before 12:30 AM with an even or favorable gender ratio in the group. VIP table and bottle service packages are also available starting around $500 for groups who want a reserved area.

Is there a dress code for Nina Kraviz at Drai's Nightclub?

Yes — Drai's Nightclub enforces a strict upscale dress code on all nights, including Nina Kraviz events. Upscale nightclub attire. No athletic wear, hats, or sandals for men. 21+ with valid photo ID. For men, collared shirts or fitted designer tees with dress shoes work well. Avoid athletic wear, shorts, sandals, and overly baggy clothing. Security checks dress code at the door, and violations are the number one reason groups get turned away.

How do I get on the guest list for Nina Kraviz at Drai's Nightclub?

Fill out the free guest list form on this page with your name, phone number, group size, and preferred date. You'll receive a text confirmation within minutes with your guest list confirmation number and check-in instructions. On the night of the event, arrive at Drai's Nightclub between 10:30 PM and 12:30 AM and check in at the guest list entrance — separate from the general admission line. The entire process is 100% free with no hidden fees or minimum spend required.

What genre of music does Nina Kraviz play at Drai's Nightclub?

Nina Kraviz is known for techno music. Nina Kraviz emerged from Irkutsk, a Siberian city more than five thousand kilometers from Moscow where the cultural isolation of the Soviet and post-Soviet periods created conditions for discovering music through whatever transmissions and imports arrived. Albums by Led Zeppelin and Pink Floyd landed first in her musical education, then acid house, Detroit techno, Chicago house, IDM, ambient, and obscure electronica filtered through by the time she reached her teenage years. The world-class Funktion-One sound system at Drai's Nightclub delivers Nina Kraviz's productions with incredible clarity, while the LED walls and laser arrays create an immersive visual experience that matches the music.

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