Oracle CloudFest.17

Wednesday, October 4  |  AT&T Park

Dance All Night With
The Chainsmokers and Ellie Goulding

Wednesday, October 4th

Party goes from 7 p.m.–11 p.m.

AT&T Park

24 Willie Mays Plaza
San Francisco, CA

View map for directions to AT&T Park

We're excited to announce The Chainsmokers and Ellie Goulding will be performing at this year's Oracle CloudFest.17.

Enjoy a night of fun and dancing at AT&T Park. What better way to wrap up JavaOne than with your colleagues, under the stars, with two of today's top entertainers.

AT&T Park is only a 15-minute walk from Moscone Center. In an effort to be more green and sustainable, we are not offering bus transportation to and from the park. For those who would prefer not to walk, we recommend public transportation.

If you register for a Full Conference pass, your ticket to Oracle CloudFest.17 is included. Wristbands are required to get into this event.

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The San Francisco Bay makes for a breathtaking backdrop at AT&T Park.

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Time to make your followers jealous—AT&T Park provides the perfect social media shot.

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No sleep 'til CloudFest. Thanks to our sponsors Intel and Tata Consultancy Services for making the night possible.

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The Grandstand Suites offer incredible views of the stage, the Bay, and thousands of dancing attendees.

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Lights, camera, Oracle.

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Come as coworkers, leave as friends.

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Nothing but smiles waiting for the performers to take the stage at AT&T Park.

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The night is nothing less than electric.

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Four thumbs up from the crowd.

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Hang onto your hat... Global Sponsor Deloitte knows how to get the party started

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There's magic in the air when performers take the stage.

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Yes, Oracle CloudFest.17 does count as business networking!

The Chainsmokers

The Chainsmokers have evolved into a dominating musical force with a diverse repertoire of songs that have led them to become today's hottest young artist/producer duo. With a signature sound that deftly reaches across indie, progressive and pop realms, their original tracks and remixes have topped the charts throughout the world. Their evolution as producers and as songwriters has seen them dial up some of the biggest breakthroughs of today. They've performed all over the world to sold out-crowds including their headline arena tour, the 2017 Billboard Music Awards, the Brit Awards, and major festivals such as Lollapalooza, Austin City Limits, Coachella, and NYC's Global Citizens. The Chainsmokers began 2017 with a Grammy win for their single "Don't Let Me Down", 22 Billboard Music Award Nominations, and performances for millions of fans on shows like Saturday Night Live and Good Morning America. Their singles "Paris" and "Something Just Like This", with Coldplay, have been certified Platinum while "Closer" has been certified 7x platinum and set the record for most weeks in the Billboard top 5 at 26 weeks. They were the first band in 56 years to have three singles simultaneously in the Billboard top 10 and their debut album "Memories…Do Not Open" debuted at number 1 on the Billboard Top 200 in April of this year.

Ellie Goulding

Ellie Goulding has arrived at a point in her career where the songs she is writing bear witness to the place she is in now—after five tumultuous years of professional and personal transformation. Over the course of those years, the British singer and songwriter has sold over six million albums and 20 million singles worldwide. She has scored six consecutive platinum singles: "Lights," "Anything Could Happen," "I Need Your Love," "Burn," "Outside" and "Love Me Like You Do" (which went to No. 1 on the iTunes chart in over 70 countries and broke the record for most streamed song in one week on Spotify). She has racked up has over one billion plays on both YouTube and Spotify. Goulding has also performed at the world's biggest festivals, including Coachella, Bonnaroo, Lollapalooza, Glastonbury, and Outside Lands, and collaborated with such top producers as Calvin Harris, Skrillex, Zedd, Diplo, and Max Martin (on "Love Me Like You Do" and her most recent single "On My Mind"). And if that weren't enough, Goulding, an avid athlete, is also a global ambassador for Nike Women, as well as the new face of Mac cosmetics' Holiday 2015 campaign.

Some artists might be intimidated to consider where to go after achieving such success, but Goulding had no doubts: For her third album, Delirium, she wanted to make everything bigger, better, and braver. In short, she says, "I knew I wanted it be on another level." The result is an expansive pop album that lays out a new narrative for the next stage of Goulding's remarkable journey. As she sings on the new song "Don't Panic": "I've got big dreams, so don't overcomplicate it."

Delirium was written and recorded in London, Goulding's native Herefordshire, Sweden, and Los Angeles with Max Martin, Greg Kurstin, One Republic's Ryan Tedder, Klas Ahlund, and Disclosure's Guy Lawrence, as well as long-time writing partner Jim Eliot. They have helped her craft a career-defining, jubilant, and euphoric pop statement. "If there was a slight fog surrounding the first two albums, I think it was me not being sure exactly what I wanted to be," Goulding says of her 2010's Lights and 2012's Halcyon. "For every pop artist who doesn't see themselves as terribly cool, there's always that slight element of insecurity. If they're just very cool, then they want to be a huge star. And if they're a huge artist, they want to be cool. I think I had a bit of that—not really knowing how people perceived me. But I'm done with that now. This probably sounds mad but a part of me views this album as an experiment—to make a big pop record. But it also feels like the right time to me."

Delirium, a word she felt summed up everything she'd been through to get to this point, captures what Goulding calls "the lifting of that fog." She made Halcyon during a particularly difficult period in her life, but it is only now, she says, that she understands quite how emotional that album was for her. "It was a dark time, but I didn't realize how dark until I started writing and recording the new album, and felt so much happier doing it. On Halcyon, I was clearly trying to express that darkness, like a cry for help. I mean, the album ends with a song called 'Dead In the Water.' Not much ambiguity in that."

Making Delirium was, by contrast, a joyful experience. "There are so many moments in the new songs that are so me—such as being annoyingly honest," she says. " Like when I sing: 'Everything you do I overanalyze.' But then there are also lines such as 'I need a love to celebrate.' I think that's a lovely thing to say, rather than 'I need a love that I can tear apart,' which is what I would probably have written in the old days!"

Delirium takes all the trademarks of Goulding's talent—that extraordinary, soaring voice, the forensic candor and self-inquiry of her lyrics, the pulsing beats of the electronic music that first ensnared her as a teenager—and turns up the heat. She knew very early on, she says, that making the album was going to be a great experience, because the collaborators she had chosen to work with were immediately on the same page.

"I saw Max Martin as this legend, but lots of people told me that his set-up was very cool, very chill and friendly. I was still incredibly nervous, though—he doesn't work with just anyone. When I did finally meet him, he was funny, warm, and down-to-earth. We were just going to do a couple of sessions, to try things out, but after the first one, he said' 'Why don't we do another week?' and then, 'Come back whenever you want to.' Nothing was ever planned. It was a real blessing for me to go into this environment that Max has created. He and his team of writers make this extraordinary music; none of it is throwaway." Greg Kurstin was another kindred spirit. "He's incredibly intuitive," she says. "He picks up on my mood very quickly, and that's why we work so well together. We don't really need to talk about things, he just gets it."

Together, Goulding and her collaborators came up with songs like "Army," "On My Mind," "Don't Panic" and "Don't Need Nobody"—monumental anthems that still manage to retain a personal intimacy. That balance is displayed most devastatingly on "Army," a track written about Goulding's best friend Hannah. Overall, Delirium sounds like an artist seizing her moment. Goulding has never sounded more assertive and in control. "I know myself so well now'" she says. " There's a new level of acceptance, and that comes from confidence. I used to be horribly shy when I started out. You can tell if you look at photographs of me from th at time—the way I posed, the clothes I wore. I was uncomfortable in my own skin." Goulding attributes part of that to her childhood growing up in rural England. She was raised with her three siblings in Hereford, a cathedral city about 16 miles east of the Welsh border. After her parents divorced when she was five, Goulding moved to the tiny village of Lyonshall with her mother and her mother's new boyfriend, a lorry driver. "I basically went from living in the city to suddenly living in the countryside," she says. Money was scarce, so young Ellie shared a bedroom with her two sisters. "Mine isn't a story of going to the BRIT school [whose notable alumni include Adele and Amy Winehouse]," she says. "I don't come from a well-off background with supportive parents. I came from a not particularly great place and got myself to an amazing one. I used to be embarrassed about it, but not anymore. I couldn't be more open—it's gotten me all this way. And I think that's pretty cool. I want that to be inspirational."

Goulding knows that releasing "a big pop album, with big radio songs, means a different level of commitment," she says. "You have to step up. But I want to go on being my usual clumsy self, walking around joking that I'm the worst pop star in the world. I have to hold on to that. But these songs really work. I'm not stupid—I listen to something and I'll know if it's working or not—and these songs just feel right."

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