Popular Post Speedlimit Posted September 16, 2014 Popular Post Posted September 16, 2014 I know this as already been said BUT 77 venues this weekend including allnighters and weekenders come on people get real this is killing the scene .Its tearing it apart ,there,s no way all these events will be full we need some centralisation to get everyone back together one large building everything in one room 5
Cunnie Posted September 16, 2014 Posted September 16, 2014 Would make my life easier as the Events Moderator 2
Popular Post Quinvy Posted September 16, 2014 Popular Post Posted September 16, 2014 Never going to happen, and we have discussed it to death on many occasions. The nub of it is this, back in the day there were a handful of Dj's and hundreds of people who just wanted to dance. Now there are hundreds of Dj's and just a handful of people who can dance. That is all. 32
Popular Post Steve G Posted September 16, 2014 Popular Post Posted September 16, 2014 Never going to happen, and we have discussed it to death on many occasions. The nub of it is this, back in the day there were a handful of Dj's and hundreds of people who just wanted to dance. Now there are hundreds of Dj's and just a handful of people who can dance. That is all. Best answer. Scene totally fragmented. Go where you want - enjoy yourselves…. 6
Popular Post Quinvy Posted September 16, 2014 Popular Post Posted September 16, 2014 Oh and please could you edit your original post to: Too many venues. It is very irritating to see it every time I come on the forum. Thank you. 6
Steve G Posted September 16, 2014 Posted September 16, 2014 Oh and please could you edit your original post to: Too many venues. It is very irritating to see it every time I come on the forum. Thank you. Perhaps he is planning on visiting them all? Just saying like…. 3
Quinvy Posted September 16, 2014 Posted September 16, 2014 Perhaps he is planning on visiting them all? Just saying like…. 1
Guest Carl Dixon Posted September 16, 2014 Posted September 16, 2014 (edited) Well, I must pipe up. Each one has their own agenda and playlist/D J's. It means individuals can have a choice of roughly the music they dance too. I quite like that notion. Edited September 16, 2014 by Carl Dixon
Quinvy Posted September 16, 2014 Posted September 16, 2014 Well, I must pipe up. Each one has their own agenda an playlist/D J's. It means individuals can have a choice of roughly the music they dance too. I quite like that notion. I was merely stating why there are so many venues on the same night. Hundreds of Dj's need hundreds of venues. 1
Guest Carl Dixon Posted September 16, 2014 Posted September 16, 2014 (edited) Indeed...duly noted. It could be a paradox couldn't it. I went to a recent London event with no more than 30 attendees in a rather large hall. It lacked atmosphere because of the low numbers but, bags of room on the dance floor. Another London event I go to, I leave early because there are too many people walking across the smaller dance floor with their spilling drinks and it is packed, plus the talc brigade making certain parts of the floor lethal. You can't please all the people...and that includes me I guess. Maybe the new film might get a few people out and attend regularly. Edited September 16, 2014 by Carl Dixon
Popular Post TOAD Posted September 16, 2014 Popular Post Posted September 16, 2014 The new film carl will mean more spilling of drinks from drunks 4
Len Posted September 16, 2014 Posted September 16, 2014 (edited) My question answered then Steve Nothing's gonna change All the best my friend, Len Edited September 16, 2014 by LEN
Chalky Posted September 17, 2014 Posted September 17, 2014 Well, I must pipe up. Each one has their own agenda and playlist/D J's. It means individuals can have a choice of roughly the music they dance too. I quite like that notion. The vast majority don't offer a choice, just a choice of who is DJing, the vast majority play the same old same records, that isn't beneficial to the scene. 2
Wiggyflat Posted September 17, 2014 Posted September 17, 2014 Ive just been asked to deejay at a club in Dalston ...I dont think they will be northern soul fans probably Shoreditch trendies.Offered money as well.I think i will take out a leaf out of Zammos book....Northern soul deejay wanted...just say no...just say no
Raremusicdirect Posted September 17, 2014 Posted September 17, 2014 I have yet to witness a club voluntarily closing in order that another may benefit from higher numbers............so it maybe a fairly long term process (or a continued economic upturn - less clubs desperate for do's and punters) for the number to fall................ However, its not really about the number of do's but the quality (relative to those who attend) - if they are all "great" nites then is it an issue ....... ? 1
Guest Carl Dixon Posted September 17, 2014 Posted September 17, 2014 Well, I must admit, when I see a non soulie come on the floor shaking their tail feathers it makes me wonder whether they look stupid or I do. I was a non soulie once.......but once the elders had shown me the light, it has never gone out. I think admission to the good events should be £100. If you act, perform and respect the music, you get £95 back on the way out!
Popular Post Kjw Posted September 17, 2014 Popular Post Posted September 17, 2014 If bootlegs and re-issues didn't exist there would be the right amount of venues and DJ's 16
Liamgp Posted September 17, 2014 Posted September 17, 2014 Can we move a few to Edinburgh? I don't think we have enough here. 1
Quinvy Posted September 17, 2014 Posted September 17, 2014 If bootlegs and re-issues didn't exist there would be the right amount of venues and DJ's Ain't that the truth? 2
Wiggyflat Posted September 17, 2014 Posted September 17, 2014 Just turned the gig down...oh well there will be bootleg Dave to jump in i suppose.I want to be at a venue where i can bump into people and talk shit about records etc.I also want to be asking the question whats this?? Oldies were great in the mid 90 s because of all the crap that was being played because it was rare.Now they are hammered and boring.Tons of northern underplayed oldies with the right beat out there but thats a bit hard for bootleg"its whats in the grooves that count" Dave 3
Andyd68 Posted September 17, 2014 Posted September 17, 2014 Just turned the gig down...oh well there will be bootleg Dave to jump in i suppose.I want to be at a venue where i can bump into people and talk shit about records etc.I also want to be asking the question whats this?? Oldies were great in the mid 90 s because of all the crap that was being played because it was rare.Now they are hammered and boring.Tons of northern underplayed oldies with the right beat out there but thats a bit hard for bootleg"its whats in the grooves that count" Dave Yourself and Chalky hit the nail on the head,the scene full of the same old oldies.We could have crossover ,funky soul,sweet /low rider,album tracks,underplayed 6ts,7ts,8ts but no its 95% same old top 500 and a bit of Drizabone for the old ladies. Life line and Va Va do a good job but very little else worth going to to hear something new.
Guest Matt Male Posted September 17, 2014 Posted September 17, 2014 If bootlegs and re-issues didn't exist there would be the right amount of venues and DJ's I don't know about that, there were plenty of boots and reissues in the 80s, but back then most people had respect and integrity. That's the difference in my opinion. Nowadays no one gives a toss.
Frankie M Posted September 17, 2014 Posted September 17, 2014 Agree above there is some poor events , but there are great events , whether too many I am unsure only time will tell if theysurvive , you certainly have to work at it too get any sort of following and offering great ATB on original vinyl works for me .there is definitely a growing number of "handbag " events , but if the punters want it , who are we too judge , I still believeif you play quality soul music you will come through,complacency has no place today . 1
Liamgp Posted September 17, 2014 Posted September 17, 2014 I don't know about that, there were plenty of boots and reissues in the 80s, but back then most people had respect and integrity. That's the difference in my opinion. Nowadays no one gives a toss. Me and my teenage mates played boots and reissues (well - Sue, Soul City, etc) and compilation LPs in the 80s but that's because we were skint and were only trying to entertain ourselves and our mates, not compete with serious all-nighters. Once we all got decent jobs they were out in the bin, which may have been a mistake given what some people pay for them now!
Popular Post Chalky Posted September 17, 2014 Popular Post Posted September 17, 2014 Bootlegs aren't the problem, some of the holy grail not as rare as some think. Lack of imagination is the problem and has been since the rise of the returnee. 9
Bazza Posted September 17, 2014 Posted September 17, 2014 (edited) Well I say thank god for plenty of venues ,most of em play the same 40 - 50 tunes,and I personally am sick to death of hearing em, but there are the odd few venues that don't, I'm pleased to say ,just getting hard to find these days Bazza Edited September 17, 2014 by Bazza
Popular Post Kjw Posted September 17, 2014 Popular Post Posted September 17, 2014 (edited) Bootlegs aren't the problem, some of the holy grail not as rare as some think. Lack of imagination is the problem and has been since the rise of the returnee. They do play a part of the problem If you think about it in the 80's there were less people on the scene and the only bootlegs were those from the 70's. There was a steady flow of new records coming and the original oldies were still available at low prices Then you have all the returnees and an endless stream of reissues / bootlegs - Goldmine, Stardust, all the copies with the lookalike labels around 2003 and now Outta Sight Lots of them want to be promoters and DJ's and take the easy and cheaper route of buying all that rubbish Edited September 17, 2014 by kjw 4
Jordirip Posted September 17, 2014 Posted September 17, 2014 Yourself and Chalky hit the nail on the head,the scene full of the same old oldies.We could have crossover ,funky soul,sweet /low rider,album tracks,underplayed 6ts,7ts,8ts but no its 95% same old top 500 and a bit of Drizabone for the old ladies. Life line and Va Va do a good job but very little else worth going to to hear something new. Soul Funk-Tion is well worth a visit. 3
Andyd68 Posted September 17, 2014 Posted September 17, 2014 Soul Funk-Tion is well worth a visit. Been trying to go for ages timing was always wrong for me,the only one I did managed to get time to go it was cancelled . Its on my list. 1
Wiggyflat Posted September 17, 2014 Posted September 17, 2014 Va va Voom is one of the few London gigs I go to.Last one I heard,Sherlock Holmes Standing At A Standstill...Dean Anderson played it.I havent heard that out in years..a nice oldie and a suprise.There are hundreds of oldies like this.If this film takes off the Northern Soul And Motown night "on vinyl" will be everywhere. 1
Popular Post Chalky Posted September 17, 2014 Popular Post Posted September 17, 2014 (edited) They do play a part of the problem If you think about it in the 80's there were less people on the scene and the only bootlegs were those from the 70's. There was a steady flow of new records coming and the original oldies were still available at low prices Then you have all the returnees and an endless stream of reissues / bootlegs - Goldmine, Stardust, all the copies with the lookalike labels around 2003 and now Outta Sight Lots of them want to be promoters and DJ's and take the easy and cheaper route of buying all that rubbish Originals vs. boots part 352......... To be honest I've been to countless oldies nights and I don't think I've seen goldmine, stardust or outta sight on the decks. I'm not saying it doesn't happen it probably does, You can't always see the decks and to be honest if I go somewhere for a pint and try and sell a few, more a social night then I don't tend not to care about what they play the records off. But I've been to many a venue where it is 100% original vinyl and the imagination is no different to a bootleg playing venue. Eddie Parker, Wade Flemons, Masqueraders, Al Williams and another couple of hundred, you hear them everywhere As I said it isn't the records, it is those playing them and those promoting the venue. There are still some good venues playing decent records. Edited September 17, 2014 by chalky 4
Quinvy Posted September 17, 2014 Posted September 17, 2014 Agree above there is some poor events , but there are great events , whether too many I am unsure only time will tell if they survive , you certainly have to work at it too get any sort of following and offering great ATB on original vinyl works for me . there is definitely a growing number of "handbag " events , but if the punters want it , who are we too judge , I still believe if you play quality soul music you will come through,complacency has no place today . That's not my experience mate, especially if you are on a monthly basis. Most of the so called up front venues are 4 times a year, because they can't get the support every month.
Popular Post Quinvy Posted September 17, 2014 Popular Post Posted September 17, 2014 Originals vs. boots part 352......... To be honest I've been to countless oldies nights and I don't think I've seen goldmine, stardust or outta sight on the decks. I'm not saying it doesn't happen it probably does, You can't always see the decks and to be honest if I go somewhere for a pint and try and sell a few, more a social night then I don't tend not to care about what they play the records off. But I've been to many a venue where it is 100% original vinyl and the imagination is no different to a bootleg playing venue. Eddie Parker, Wade Flemons, Masqueraders, Al Williams and another couple of hundred, you hear them everywhere As I said it isn't the records, it is those playing them and those promoting the venue. There are still some good venues playing decent records. If I owned those records, I'd play them as well. As would any other person, and that's the problem. I would play them interspersed with lesser known tunes and not one after the other, and that's the difference. Mix it up a bit. 6
Popular Post John Reed Posted September 17, 2014 Popular Post Posted September 17, 2014 But I've been to many a venue where it is 100% original vinyl and the imagination is no different to a bootleg playing venue. Eddie Parker, Wade Flemons, Masqueraders, Al Williams and another couple of hundred, you hear them everywhere That’s what I've been noticing more and more when reading playlists posted here and on facebook. People are singing the praises of OVO sets that contain very expensive records and I have nothing against people owning and playing expensive records. But they do seem to be the same ones played over and over again. 4
Pete S Posted September 17, 2014 Posted September 17, 2014 Oh and please could you edit your original post to: Too many venues. It is very irritating to see it every time I come on the forum. Thank you. Fucking hell Phil, are you the new me? I recommend Prozac. Grumpy git 2
Chalky Posted September 17, 2014 Posted September 17, 2014 If I owned those records, I'd play them as well. As would any other person, and that's the problem. I would play them interspersed with lesser known tunes and not one after the other, and that's the difference. Mix it up a bit. They haven't the imagination to mix it up a bit, otherwise we wouldn't keep getting these topics.
Frankie Crocker Posted September 17, 2014 Posted September 17, 2014 Better to have too many venues than too few. They're mainly local and regional events catering to short distance travellers so transport costs aren't a big issue. I suspect it's the younger element that are DJing so that's a healthy aspect of the current renaissance. For sure the records could and should be more varied than the Brice Coefield-Nolan Porter-Marvin Gaye-Donna Colman-Al Wilson sequence played out time and time and time again. Maybe the real issue is the lack of top drawer national events like The 100 Club, Kings Hall, Keele? 1
Quinvy Posted September 17, 2014 Posted September 17, 2014 Fucking hell Phil, are you the new me? I recommend Prozac. Grumpy git It's bad grammar mate, does my head in. Anyway some kind person has corrected it so I'm very happy now. And I've been on Prozac for years. 2
Pete S Posted September 17, 2014 Posted September 17, 2014 It's bad grammar mate, does my head in. Anyway some kind person has corrected it so I'm very happy now. And I've been on Prozac for years. Sorry, did it say "To"?
Mak Posted September 17, 2014 Posted September 17, 2014 If bootlegs and re-issues didn't exist there would be the right amount of venues and DJ's To right Kev 1
Wiganer1 Posted September 17, 2014 Posted September 17, 2014 if you take away youre favourite venue - where would you go next ? if you have a choice the scene is still healthy in my view.. 2
Winnie :-) Posted September 17, 2014 Posted September 17, 2014 There is definitely too many venues...now what happens??
Frankie Crocker Posted September 17, 2014 Posted September 17, 2014 There is definitely too many venues...now what happens?? Nowt. Unless you set up a Northern Soul Police to close down venues. Poor events won't survive but even if they linger on, it becomes no different to sitting in a quiet pub with better music in the background and a dance floor for those up for it. If someone wants to promote a venue, let them: we should be encouraging attendance not clamping down on minor events.
Winnie :-) Posted September 17, 2014 Posted September 17, 2014 Nowt. Unless you set up a Northern Soul Police to close down venues. Poor events won't survive but even if they linger on, it becomes no different to sitting in a quiet pub with better music in the background and a dance floor for those up for it. If someone wants to promote a venue, let them: we should be encouraging attendance not clamping down on minor events. Well that's that sorted then, there's no problem....
Mellorful Posted September 17, 2014 Posted September 17, 2014 Right amount of venues IMHO given the variety of soul available; Motown, R&B, Modern, funk, Classics - top 100, oldies, rare etc. People pick the venue according to their taste in soul. Personally I avoid venues that play a lot of modern, R&B and funk; but I sincerely wish those venues well because though they don't suit me they satisfy the needs of others. If you had a few major venues where would they be sited because a lot of people can't or wont travel long distances, what would be the target audience, what is their music policy etc. Its too hard to satisfy everyone on the scene. So far this year we have attended Minehead, Prestatyn, Bridlington, weekenders; the Keele and Stoke allnighters but we can't do em all until The National Lottery get it right and draw the six numbers on my ticket. 2
Guest kev such Posted September 17, 2014 Posted September 17, 2014 (edited) Not this again. There's no way the amount of events can be regulated or minimalised. An event will survive on the simple understanding that if people go it'll survive, if they dont it wont. The idea of others events closing down to accommodate a certain promoters ego is rediculous, and why should they shut down to benefit another event. Maybe the case of promoters being at the helm of multiple events in one area, with the same pals guesting for each other continuously ( week in week out) over a four week period is a part of the problem? If the same people promote the same based events every available weekend, that'll dilute it way more than random people putting an event on. Also surely people who just cant let it go when they have promoted and it hasnt worked, just move to another venue and try to flog that dead horse again and again and again!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! But ponitificicate and bemoan "theres too many do's on" when they're misguided egotistical definition of "what it should be" doesnt work again. NO-one has the right to dictate who can and cannot put an event on wether its monthly, yearly or anywhere in between, good luck to them I say. sink or swim the people will let you know either way. Edited September 17, 2014 by kev such
Guest gordon russell Posted September 17, 2014 Posted September 17, 2014 Never going to happen, and we have discussed it to death on many occasions. The nub of it is this, back in the day there were a handful of Dj's and hundreds of people who just wanted to dance. Now there are hundreds of Dj's and just a handful of people who can dance. That is all. yep always makes me laugh when someone pops out of the woodwork spends a year or so doing the following 1collecting the big stuff 2attending everywhere he may think he fits in and gladhanding all and sundry,3 tells us everywhere he goes is great (wether it is or not) bigging up the dj,s ect so he can get some spots.....then lastly when he gets no spots........usually after about 2-1/2 years......he looses his mojo and sells his tunes never to be seen again............never occurs to these people to just go OUT and enjoy As far as too many venues there could be a million.......l go to 3 or 4 predominately,regardless what else is on on that night........as l,ll wager do most
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