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The Chillout Room
Any OSA Members Play At Nightclubs?
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<blockquote data-quote="mixster" data-source="post: 819002" data-attributes="member: 5221"><p>^^^What they said. I hate to sound like an old fart but the reasons I loved clubbing so much seem to have disappeared. </p><p></p><p>Example? Last Saturday I went to Cream Classics at the Rainbow in Birmingham. It was absolutely packed, and it didn't feel like there was a lot of love in the room. People literally barging into you. A large fight kicked off on the dance floor of the room we were in. Earlier on I was chatting to some guy with a big, but slightly menacing smile on his face. "I got into two fights earlier but now all I can think about is love" he said, showing me the cuts on his fingers that had probably come from his unfortunate victim's teeth. I was dancing at one point right next to my girlfriend when I noticed a guy getting closer and closer to her. He was dancing right up behind her, touching her, so she moved away. He followed and did the same again. She turned around and said 'I have a boyfriend' - not wishing to point me out and make me the focus of his rejection anger - to which he said 'Your boyfriend is shit' and went away scowling. </p><p></p><p>I genuinely believe that you have missed the days of the One Love Family I felt part of as a raver in the early nineties. There are still good nights to be found, but you need to keep it underground. The very idiots we broke away from to go raving discovered where we had been when dance music became commercial. That's my take on it anyway.</p><p></p><p>In answer to your original question (and sorry for hijacking your thread) I used to play regularly in clubs and bars up and down the country. It can be the best buzz you've ever experienced if the night goes well and the punters are enjoying what you're doing, and a descent into nightmare territory if it goes pear shaped <img src="/styles/default/xenforo/smilies/classics/crazy.gif" class="smilie" loading="lazy" alt=":crazy:" title="acrazy :crazy:" data-shortname=":crazy:" /></p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="mixster, post: 819002, member: 5221"] ^^^What they said. I hate to sound like an old fart but the reasons I loved clubbing so much seem to have disappeared. Example? Last Saturday I went to Cream Classics at the Rainbow in Birmingham. It was absolutely packed, and it didn't feel like there was a lot of love in the room. People literally barging into you. A large fight kicked off on the dance floor of the room we were in. Earlier on I was chatting to some guy with a big, but slightly menacing smile on his face. "I got into two fights earlier but now all I can think about is love" he said, showing me the cuts on his fingers that had probably come from his unfortunate victim's teeth. I was dancing at one point right next to my girlfriend when I noticed a guy getting closer and closer to her. He was dancing right up behind her, touching her, so she moved away. He followed and did the same again. She turned around and said 'I have a boyfriend' - not wishing to point me out and make me the focus of his rejection anger - to which he said 'Your boyfriend is shit' and went away scowling. I genuinely believe that you have missed the days of the One Love Family I felt part of as a raver in the early nineties. There are still good nights to be found, but you need to keep it underground. The very idiots we broke away from to go raving discovered where we had been when dance music became commercial. That's my take on it anyway. In answer to your original question (and sorry for hijacking your thread) I used to play regularly in clubs and bars up and down the country. It can be the best buzz you've ever experienced if the night goes well and the punters are enjoying what you're doing, and a descent into nightmare territory if it goes pear shaped :crazy: [/QUOTE]
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