Wednesday 29 September 2010

SHOW REVIEW: Hospitality, Brixton Academy, London (24.9.10)


‘Bass To Melt Your Face’
Friday 24th September 2010
Brixton Academy, London



The increasing popularity of Hospital Records and the unexpected closure of Fabric’s sister club Matter means the Hospitality nights are now bound for bigger and better things. I had been to dance parties at Brixton Academy before but Hospitality is less a dance party and more a way of life. In my mind Drum’and’Bass nights should be small, cramped, dirty, heavy, grimy, sweaty and in the end leave you feeling much the same way. Whether this would transgress to a much larger venue was yet to be seen.

Straight away the immense growth in Hospital Records’ following became apparent, as along with all the usual trainer wearing, shit-talking, face-chewing cainers came a new breed of much more sober looking and sophisticated ‘Ministry of Sound’ types. But there was no doubt all were there for one thing – to get down and dirty to some of the best Drum’and’Bass around town.

London Elektricity have never been a favourite of mine and tonight saw them do no better. While they are good they always seem to miss the mark. Their beats are fine but their lead in’s and climax’s leave you hanging mid-peak, never coming back to get you. Their mixes are disjointed and mismatched at times and often sound as if they’re simply changing records on a player. A steady act that would benefit from stepping it up a notch or 10.

Next were High Contrast, with contrast being the operative word. The came, they saw, the tore the place up. With a savvy MC who knows exactly when and where he’s needed and a stretch of epic beats, breaks and classic samples that almost caused a riot High Contrast got the floor moving and left all wanting to see more. But not now… maybe another time… Danny Byrd was on next. So though High Contrast became a fast crowd favourite no one was that sad to see them go.

It’s hard to review Danny Byrd, as it is hard to put truly great Drum’and’Bass into words. Drum’and’Bass is very much a feeling and experience, making you dance into a frenzy and do things you normally wouldn’t do in front of complete strangers. I don’t think anyone spoke during Danny Byrd’s set for fear of missing a beat, catching a breath and dropping dead on the spot. From housey, dancey, disco samples to the heaviest, dirtiest most evil bass lines you’ve heard in an age Danny Byrd delivered it all and was heard right the way through to China. If High Contrast got the floor moving Danny set it on fire. Not a foot touched the ground until he finally had to be forcibly faded out by the sound engineer to make way for Andy C, but no one would have cared if he played all night. Byrd is the word.

And you’ve gotta love Andy C. We all love Andy C! The original and one of the best delivered his standard high quality set that melted your face and kept you going till sun up. But following The Byrd is a hard yard and as most kept on keeping on some went for drinks, some for smokes, and after half a set from Andy C I reluctantly threw in the towel.

Hospitality is an amazing club night. It’s well done, well organised, always delivers quality line up’s, so it’s easy to see why it has taken off in such epic fashion. But I can’t help feeling we lose a small piece of the true down to earth Hospitality the bigger and better it gets. But that’s the way it goes I suppose.