Posts Tagged ‘Australia’

The Philanthropic Foodie

Thursday, November 24th, 2011


Throughout the summer in Ibiza, Ben and Jo spend their respective time playing with arpeggiated space-echo effects and creating kaftans for well-heeled patrons of the island’s finest beach boutiques. Unbeknown to most they’ve also been hatching an inspired way to help the people of Sydney ‘live well and give back’ in the run up to Christmas. The Philanthropic Foodie is a project designed around an idea that along with the usual yuletide gluttony you can also help those less fortunate. All profits from the business go directly to a leading local homeless charity. From humble beginnings as a food van in 1991, Youth Off The Streets has provided accommodation, education and psychological services to more than 50,000 young people.

The goal is to sell 400 hampers and raise $25,000 for Youth Off The Streets. Contained in the ‘Love Sydney‘ picnic hamper is a selection of the finest foods and beautiful beverages sourced from Sydney’s best delis, restaurants and bakeries. It’s a novel idea of mixing charitable giving and self indulgence and with the attention they’ve been getting they could be onto a hit. Think of it as a way to karmically balance your Christmas excess.

It’s worth noting that on any given night this festive season 36,000 young people will be homeless in Australia alone. This number has doubled since 1989. The severity of life on the streets, the neglect and abuse means an early intervention is vital for hope of recovery. No matter where in the world you are this Christmas please bare this in mind and think about giving something back. In Sydney at least, it’s now a lot more palatable to do so.

Check out the Philanthropic Foodie hampers at foodie.org.au, follow them on twitter and like them on facebook.

Playground Weekender Announce First Round of Acts

Wednesday, November 16th, 2011

The end of the year must be nigh when we start looking towards events of 2012. Australia’s favourite festival Playground Weekender has released it’s first round of acts and a sneak preview of the year’s visual identity…

playground-weekender-2012

It looks like a good basis for a knees up in the riverside resort on the outskirts of Sydney with plenty of electronic representation from the likes of Modeselektor and The Orb. It’s by no means an obvious Aussie festival lineup, with some forward thinking bookings on the chilled shoegaze end of the spectrum with Ariel Pink and local favourites Seekae. Choice thing going so far though… Greg Wilson‘s disco delights in the sunshine, only 4 months to go!

Tickets, info, etc, here.

We Love… Sydney – James Zabiela Garden Party

Friday, May 27th, 2011

Here’s a few happy snaps from our recent Australian adventure with James Zabiela, Midland, Tom Budden and our very own Ben Korbel. Summer in the city… Also, check out the raving stormtrooper video below.

We Love… Sydney

Friday, May 13th, 2011

On Friday May 20th we head down under to Sydney’s Chinese Laundry. The Darling Harbor club plays host to We Love… favorite James Zabiela who this year celebrates 10 years as a We Love… resident. Joining him from the UK are Midland and Tom Budden along with a host of Australian natives including our very own Ben Korbel. The event takes on a garden party vibe as an outdoor arena is specially erected for the event which opens at 3pm and goes on long into the night.

Tickets from Resident Advisor here.
Facebook event page here.
Follow James Zabiela on Twitter here.

Door Policy

Wednesday, November 18th, 2009
Get in

Get in

It is easy to dislike a place that only lets in the rich, but before we get too self-satisfied let’s remember that nightclubs have never been the most democratic of institutions. The domains of cliques and gangs, they tread a fine line between the two meanings of the verb ‘to discriminate’. Trying to keep out those who aren’t regulars, don’t wear the right clothes, don’t get the music or take the right drugs even if done with the best of intentions – creating an exciting other space for freaks and their friends – still tips easily into exclusivity. Even the biggest, most seemingly democratic places contain velvet ropes, backrooms, inner-sanctums, huts and caravans for workers, owners, friends and random people who think that to be there means to be somehow special. Élitism, even if it’s only against those who don’t possess the right subcultural capital, is still an -ism (if not one of the really nasty kinds).Ewan Pearson

The subject off door policy within nightclubs has reared it’s high-and-mighty head lately. From the basement sweatboxes and grungy warehouses to pulsing castles with palatial interiors, almost every club will have a policy of some sorts. Decisions on which clientele to admit or reject rest largely with the door staff, although the code and system (if any) is generally devised by the management. It can be a hard thing to define – and easier to do so on who not to allow. For example, if The Social in Paris really is for “clueless, aggressive, Sarkozy loving, rayban wearing, coked up posh kids”, it would be hard for a club to define this custom with a notice on the door.

It is a self fulfilling prophecy that if a club is harder to get into, it becomes more desirable to try to do so. Take the infamously ironclad Berghain in Berlin for example. It is ridiculously hard for some people to get into, but is widely regarded as the best nightclub in the world. It might just be so that a policy on the door is not an absurd and clueless arbitrary decision made by steroid fueled meat-heads, but is in fact a necessary attitude in order to maintain the meaning of the “club”.

Open sesame

Open sesame

Some people revel in the unchallenging democracy of an open door policy, such as at Fabric in London. Where the door staff are unlikely to turn anyone away unless clearly inebriated and ask only that business men remove their ties. It’s understandable to have no interest in a venue with which the first interaction you have is to be judged by your style and manner. However, a door policy is what defines a club, creating it’s atmosphere along with the music and location. In essence, the policy establishes the crowd. Surely part of the reason you go to a nightclub is for the people who you will share the night and dancefloor with? Clubs which could easily fill the capacity twice over on any given night don’t because they care about maintaining a special atmosphere and a crowd that cares about the music being played.

With your market analyst head on, you can see that a strict door leads to a loyal clientele and a hand-picked demographic. Where there is a healthy scene clubs can afford to be fastidious. Ibiza is unique in its door style, having a historical reputation of wide admittance (and with the main clubs only open for four months per year) they generally welcome all and sundry. Venues that stretch into the thousands in capacity perhaps help to dilute the undesirables.

In any case, our top tips for getting in would be: Be yourself and treat your surroundings with respect. If you are in Perth, Australia: No Ed Hardy, or dyed rat tails.

Ewan Pearson

Fabric

Berghain

Australia National News