D.O.T.S.! Tonight! Brixton innit!

I’m on early style, nicing up the place… 

DOTS DANCE N PRANCE
(as mentioned in this months DJ Mag Wub-Wub special)

16th AUGUST

BENGA (Big Apple / Tempa) – dubstep – 8 bar-

BOK BOK Birthday Set! (LWR END SPASM / Sub FM)- grime – 4×4 – bassline house

JASON MUNDO + LIFTED MC (US) – Dub Assembly tour

JOHN EDEN – (Uncarved.org / Woofah) – Dub, Dancehall

BOOMNOISE -(Sub fm / dubstepforum.com / dots )- Back to the 80’s set!

myspace.com/joindots

drumzofthesouth.com

9pm-2am £5 / £3 concs

Plan B, 418 Brixton Road, London, SW9

Who’s in the house?

Flippin’ ‘eck.

Be careful what you wish for… after several years of moaning about always dj-ing the 1st slot when nobody is around, I got brought up sharp by the prospect of a 4am appearance this time!

Certain associates of mine felt that this would be a tough task, forgetting my veteran years of raving, and more importantly 2 years worth of near total sleep deprivation because of fatherhood.

The venue was a squatted (?) ex-pub in Hackney Wick. Proper top organisation in the place, nice attention to detail. Venue and promoters clearly knew the score.

I turned up to the sounds of Oneman’s savage bass workouts. People were going mental and it was only about midnight or so.

Boomnoise

Boomnoise

Boomnoise followed with a surprisingly versatile set of funk bizness which had the laydeez dancing as well as people like myself who wished to escape from the d**step in the main room. I wasn’t wild about the tinny 80s end of what he was playing but he moved away from that into an impressively diverse selection incorporating 60s, 70s and even some 80s post-punk stuff. Big!

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IMG_2945

Vibes were good and I even found myself enjoying parts of the sets by Anti-Social, Downshifter and Slaughter Mob in the main room. It was even possible to have the odd conversation above the woohm woohm woohm now and again and I caught up with a couple of BASH soldiers, including Mr Le Bug who has a couple of awesome singles in the pipeline (coming Sept and Oct)…

As 4am approached, the small room was awash with mentalists dancing to ‘ardkore and the like. This was followed by Benga and Chef doing a back to back set of their latest dubplates. Even a dubstep sceptic like me has a lot of time for these two and quite frankly following them would be no easy gig. Some of Benga’s new tunes are OUTRAGEOUS.

I went on shortly after 5am and did good. It’s always disconcerting to be flipping through your records to find the next tune and hear the music stop dead. But when you look over your shoulder and see that someone has leant over the booth to press “stop” and lots of people are smiling and sticking their hands in the air… well, that panic dissolves pretty quickly, heh heh. I kicked off with some harder ragga stuff and then moved into 80s dancehall and was about to get into a 21st century roots thing when the evening came to an end.

Outside, people were milling about with the unmistakable air of a massive which has had a righteously good time.

The 276 got me home in time to witness the rest of my household waking up. They told me in no uncertain terms that I needed a bath, which is where I woke up shortly afterwards.

reading

Kingsland slammed the megaphone handle into his critic’s temple, causing the whining, posing tossbag to collapse into a crumpled heap. “ATTACK!!” George screamed – the signal for the great unwashed of the Clapton Brew Crew to charge through the crowd, kicking and punching anything that moved!

A hail of Merrydown bottles, filled with piss, rained down on the stage, drenching Bassey and her backing band. The crusties’ dogs sunk their fangs into Fratellis fans, while a group of Young Conservatives, who’d travelled all the way from Inverness just to catch new indie sensations The Monday Club, cried out in torment as paraboot after paraboot pounded against their vital organs.

BEYOND THE IMPLODE: “FESTIVAL!”

Dave Stelfox on Jah Cure being released from prison.

Hyperfrank on homophobia and grime.

Melissa Bradshaw interviewing Sarah of FWD/Rinse.

server aggro

I’ve moved to a new spiffy webhost. Whilst doing this some things have been lost, notably a few pics and commments from this blog. Apologies for that – what passes for normal service here will resume shortly.

Expect Anything Fear Nothing

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Expect Anything Fear Nothing – Seminar Online

At the beginning of March 2007 a seminar on the Situationist Movement in Scandinavia took place in Copenhagen. At this event artists, activists and academics met and discussed the Scandinavian branch of the Situationist movement and its ambition to renew society through art.

Today at the 50 years anniversary of the founding of the Situationist International (July 28 2007) we launch a website with all the presentations of the seminar as video streams. Watch the presentations by Jacqueline de Jong (NL), Karen Kurczynski (US), Stewart Home (UK), Thomas McDonough (US), Peter Laugesen (DK), Hardy Strid (SE), Lars Morell (DK), Mikkel Bolt (DK), Jakob Jakobsen (DK), Gordon Fazakerley (UK/DK), Fabian Tompsett (UK), Zwi Negator (DE) and Carl Nørrested (DK).

Go to http://destroysi.dk

All the best

Mikkel Bolt and Jakob Jakobsen

Includes a great Stewart Home talk on punk rock, King Mob, the ultra-left in London, drug smugglers etc.