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I guess kind of interesting.

I've been to my fair share of pre-burn parties hosted by some big Burning an groups that share similar antics.

I wonder how much more off the rails these are?

Having been to Burning Man and various parties/raves/festivals of all sorts, AND several of the aforementioned 'Clambakes' in the article, these are different than usual. Some overlap, not necessarily better or worse, but definitely a distinct niche. It seems like more of an event for all the weird kids from HS drama/art/AV clubs, big emphasis on theatrics and assuming roles. A sort of fuck-you humor, not for gentle souls. Good times.
I don't want to come off as blasé or anything, but I fail to see how this isn't just another (admittedly lyrical) description of the trance scene happening all over Europe, many instances of which (the Boom festival mentioned in the article being one of them) having been readily accessible without any fuss or secrecy for decades. I basically read it as 'I went to the Boom, except for rich people, and it was cool'. Perhaps I misunderstood?
You have it. There's a "scene" not really different from the SF scene that existed since the beat days (at least). The Valley is more square; this is more SF, some Marin, some down the coast to La Honda/Pescadero.

The person writing it up is just trying to make it seem a bit more exotic. "Underground"? My friends invite me to parties. People who aren't my friends don't. Does this make one of the set of parties "underground"?

Wow. People these days must be square and boring. Heck, I remember a coworker's birthday bash on a Half Moon Bay beach with turntables, booze and bonfire til 4 am and people trying to steal our rented generator. If that's "pushing boundaries," I want to know where to turn in my cool kids' card.
Afterparty raves are a "scene" now? smh.