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by kortex
1960 days ago
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My favorite dive is in that category, a goth industrial club in a former hole in the wall burger joint. The front is retro diner, the dance hall is cramped, filled with psychedelic art, and sports three giant paper maché tentacles emerging from an octopus mural from an undersea theme night five years back. The alley where everyone smokes is covered in graffiti. The sound system has gremlins and the speakers distort, arguably improving the harsh industrial tracks. It's the most welcoming place in the whole city (except for that one time a volatile neo-nazi showed up - he got literally thrown out the door, we don't tolerate intolerance). Ultra LGBTQ friendly. I have no idea how they stayed afloat during the best of times and I'm not sure it's going to open up once covid is gone. But the community itself has been around since the 70s, hopping from one seedy joint to the next as they got shuttered, demolished, turned into swanky gastropubs and hospital parking lots. Something will arise from the ashes. |
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It's (supposedly) the longest-running dark/alternative night in the world, starting in 1987. The venue was built as a two-level horse stables in the 19th century, so there's a strange, sloping ramp to the first floor. It was an electroplating works for much of the 20th century, before being squatted in the 1980s by the punks and goths. The back of the building is now a specialist scrap metal merchant, which is a source of some of the decoration -- there's an old tank outside, bits of ex-military aircraft, the seats in the "quiet" area are rocket launcher ammo cases, the industrial signs saying "Sellafield Nuclear Authority — Restricted Zone" and the like are real.
Bits of the building have been used to raise money at times; e.g. a restaurant, film shoots, weddings, other club nights, but the main goth/industrial party is on Saturdays, 23h-07:30h. They at least used to sell cake and jerk chicken. When I first went, you had to be signed in by an existing member, but you could also bring your own drinks if you didn't want to use the cheap bar. That's no longer the case, and the bar is OK-for-London prices.
I'm rarely in London on Saturday night nowadays, so I haven't been for a while, and I don't know how many people go to the club. (In the past, there have been periods where it's been a bit quiet.)
It looks like they just received a £78,000 grant from the UK Arts Council, which is excellent news [1].
[1] http://islingtonnow.co.uk/electrowerkz-grant/
https://www.facebook.com/SlimelightOfficial