Posts Tagged ‘Manchester’

We Love The Warehouse Project

Friday, September 30th, 2011

After a few years absence from the Manchester party circuit we are very pleased to be back at The Warehouse Project hosting something of an Ibiza closing party. For this special event we have invited some of our favourite acts from this Summer’s Space residents and guests.

Now in his tenth year as a We Love… resident, technical maestro James Zabiela headlines the event. Joining him is the true godfather of techno Derrick May. Nic Fanciuli makes a welcome return to the We Love fold and is joined by Ralph Lawson’s full live band 2020Soundsystem. Next up we have Geddes and newly initiated We Love resident jozif. Completing the line up Jem Haynes and Mat Playford bring the sounds of the Space Discoteca and Terrace respectively to the Picadilly car park.

Tickets here.

Folk Cafe in El Salon

Thursday, September 15th, 2011


There’s something eternally endearing about that half-man/half-beard take on dance music that only makes sense above the Watford Gap. With that in mind and after a successful mini-festival last year, we’re bringing Justin Parkinson and his motley crew straight outta Didsbury and the Folk Cafe. Expect the balearic spirit crossed with something quintessentially Mancunian on Sunday when Bones welcomes Be, Nick Massey, Justin Parkinson and Dan English of Naive Melody fame to El Salon. Expect classy and lovingly collected music from some of the top brass of the scene, check their mix archive, here. A quote from the folk cafe website should help get their ethos across…

Some folks like their luck buttered
Some folk want their cake and eat it
Some folks are the kind of folks you’ll find at Folk

Check the video below to hear Justin and others discuss the essence of design.

HearHere and Now Wave – Matthew Dear live

Monday, December 6th, 2010
Hear Matthew Here Dear

Hear Matthew Here Dear

TONIGHT sees Another fantastic line up from our Mancunian friends HearHere, this time collaborating with the ever fantastic Now Wave at their local stomping ground The Deaf Institute. Matthew Dear made his Terrace debut for us at Space this summer, needless to say it was one of our highlights and his live albums are on regular rotation in the We Love… Office. Support comes from the psychedelic-disco-dub doyens Darkstar. Check the video below for footage from Matthew’s Terrace set and also an interview with the man himself.

HearHere and 44 Presents – Ewan Pearson

Monday, October 18th, 2010
Sandwhich maker extrodinaire

Sandwhich maker extrodinaire

This one is for all our Mancunian brethren out there. HearHere have been putting on parties in Manchester for a few years now, throughout which they have had a fairly eclectic mix of guests to say the least. From the ‘new Jazz-Pop’ sounds of The Portico Quartet to the ‘UFO grindcore’ of Otto Von Schirach, they even managed to squeeze a We Love… resident in there in the Form of Ian Blevins. Next Friday sees another two We Love… favorites take to the helm; Ewan Pearson and Andrew Hung. Ewan’s two sets for us this summer at Space were true highlights and to see him in a venue like the Soup Kitchen would be a real treat. (Incidentally for anyone who doesn’t know the Soup Kitchen, you need to get to know; great for a pint on a rainy afternoon.) Supporting dance music’s most well read DJ will be Andrew Hung, one half of the spectacular Fuck Buttons. If his taste in music is half as good as the music he makes then his DJ set will be twice as good as anything you’ve ever heard. Check the video below to see Ewan in action at Space as he describes his trade secrets.

Guy Williams; Black Rabbit, Disco and Over-zealous Party Police (interview)

Thursday, September 16th, 2010

By guest blogger Jonty Skrufff. Find Jonty on facebook here.

Starting his career at the Hacienda’s legendary queer night Flesh in 1983 in Manchester, Guy Williams has gone on to become a fixture of both the gay and straight global club scenes, holding high profile residencies at the likes of Ministry of Sound and DTPM and more recently at Ibiza’s We Love mega-parties at Space. Focusing primarily on house, he’s also re-embraced disco’s latest renaissance, playing predominantly classic tracks at his monthly Black Rabbit parties at We Love.

“Personally I’m really happy that disco has become big again because my musical roots are based in 80s music and disco and it definitely still is big today,” he enthuses.

“There’s also loads of really good nu disco being made which is more musical and warm and through these hard times we’re living in right now people need that. Though I still love good deep house and tech house as well.”

He’s also firmly attached to the concept of playing quality disco and house music loud, judging by a recent angry message he posted on Facebook hours after returning from spinning a high profile slot at London’s Lovebox Festival.

“Lovebox Nazi sound police take note- it’s a MUSIC festival!” he stormed, hours after the event, adding for good effect, ‘Dickwads’.

Today he’s decidedly more chilled describing the East London outdoor event as ‘an overall good experience’ and one he hopes to repeat next year.

“In general it was a good day at Lovebox but the Art Against Knives/Jezebel sound system where I was playing at kept being told to turn the music down,” he explains. “They even closed it down a few times and it really wasn’t that loud.”

Sound quibbles aside, he’s a no-nonsense, knowledgeable interviewee, reflecting his 17 year career working as a DJ, party promoter and experienced dance label executive, who though continuing to travel extensively, remains based in London for much of the year.

Skrufff: What’s your assessment of the health- or otherwise- of London nightlife right now; how does it compare to 3, 5 and 10 years ago?

Guy Williams: “Well as most people will know, partly due to the recession and partly due to people going to more live gigs and festivals and web related events quite a few clubs have closed down and nights finished in London. Three years ago was especially tough because three of the nights I’d played at for a resident for a number of years all finished, pretty much simultaneously. But there are still some great nights and parties on and a lot of pubs have become cool places to go with good DJ and cheaper prices so people will always want to go out and dance.”

Skrufff: I’ve read that many gay pubs are closing because people are meeting over the internet and via web 2.0/ mobile phone apps: how much do you see a difference in the strength of the gay scene compared to straight clubs?

Guy Williams: “I’ve long thought the gay scene has been a little on the slide for quite some time due to both the reasons you mentioned and also because of the fact that being gay is no longer underground and has become almost predictable. Though there are still great parties like Horse Meat Disco and various warehouse parties, thank God.”

Skrufff: You grew up in the Manchester suburb of Cheadle Hulme: what were you doing between school and starting DJing in 1993?

Guy Williams: “I left school in 1986 and after leaving I went straight into a telesales job which I did for a few mind-numbing years before landing a manager’s job at a clothes shop aged 19 which I did for five years. I started DJing in 1993 and when that started to really take off in 1994 I left the clothes shop job and concentrated on DJing. I also then started working for PWL – Pete Waterman’s company looking after promo for Eastern Bloc records, his dance label, before moving to London in 1997.”

Skrufff: You became a resident at the Hacienda’s legendary night Flesh in 1993: how did you land the first gig?

Guy Williams: “I had been going to Flesh since the very first one in 1990 so when I started DJing in 1993, Paul Cons, the promoter gave us a slot. When I say ‘us’ I used to DJ with a guy called David and we went under the name of Planet Janet. It was definitely one the highlights of my DJ career as Flesh was such a seminal night.”

Skrufff: Peter Hook’s recent book on the Hacienda (‘How Not To Run A Club’) is full of tales of hooligans and gangsters packing out the club and regularly causing chaos, how much did you have to navigate/ interact with those kind of characters?

Guy Williams: “I started going to the Hacienda when I was just 16 years old and it was very much a student / indie kind of club until 1988 when dance music started creeping in, as did the gangster element. I used to go to a Wednesday night called Hot, Fridays called Nude and sometimes on Saturday as well; all of them straight nights and by end of 1989 it was definitely getting rougher. The gangsters eventually started appearing at Flesh too, which was a gay night. To be honest, the gangsters ruined Manchester’s club scene. By 1993 loads of venues and nights were closing down simply because it was just too dangerous, and that was partly the recent I left and moved to London after experiencing a few dry years.”

Skrufff: Danny Tenaglia booked you for a couple of his renowned Be Yourself parties in New York 2002, how did that happen and much difference did his support make to your career and profile?

Guy Williams: “Danny was a bit of a DJ hero to me in the early nineties and I basically became friends with him and his manager Kevin. When they first asked me to play it was one of the most flattering and daunting opportunities I’ve experienced though luckily a group of friends accompanied me to New York and the gig in the event was amazing, Danny came into the booth about an hour before he was due to play and asked if I would play for longer. And to get invited back a second time was ace.”

Skrufff: Do you ever go back to your hometown of Cheadle Hulme or any old school reunions?

Guy Williams: “I never really go back there but have driven past my old house, which I loved a few times. And there have been a number of reunions which I thought about going to but didn’t quite make it.”

Guy Williams – Soundcloud

Black Rabbit – Myspace

Jonty Skrufff’s Blog

Folk Ibiza

Thursday, May 20th, 2010

Folk story

We love music. We also love throwing parties at Folk, and those long, lazy days sat in the sun with a cold drink and lots of like minded people with nothing much else on their minds other than a forgotten melody drifting on the breeze…Our parties are relaxed affairs, although we do like dancing.

There’s no pressure at our parties. You don’t have to be fashionable or part of a scene. There’s no pressure on the DJs, they have the freedom to play whatever they want, when they want. We believe in a spirit of independence and individuality. We still believe in love.

Holding these values above the desire to make money has allowed us to experience some very special moments. If you share these values, let’s come together to create a magical experience at the very source of the original Balearic vibe. See you on the beach…

Folk up on the wrong side of the bed?

If the Manchester contingent of party starters and music lovers can keep the Balearic spirit alive in the grey north of England then surely in their spiritual home of Ibiza things will be proper buzzin’. The term Balearic is bandied around as all things to all men, carrying a sense of an eclectic but refined taste. The team from Folk have chosen a selection of locations around the island to host a mini-festival of sorts. Running from Thursday 22nd to Monday 26th of July in a diverse but kindred set of venues such as Boutique Hostal Salinas and Sunset Ashram. The folk from Folk will also be making appearance on our hallowed roof terrace, the Premier Etage on Sunday the 25th of July.

Folk me!

The night in question promises to be maybe just a little bit special, with Detroit natives Jeff Mills and Derrick May keeping things rolling in the Discoteca while the European contingent of Miss Kittin and Steve Lawler promise an epic back to back 5 hour set of deep and beautiful house music on La Terraza. There’s also “digital disco” vibes in El Salon from Matty J and his crew from Tirk Records. As for that roof terrace expect the likes of Balearic Mike, Lexx, Be and Naive Melody to be spinning bizarre things that aren’t getting played on the radio. You can check out some mixes they have kindly provided to us here, including a session by Phil Mison at the Cafe Del Mar way back in 1993 during his residency at the original sunset bar. We’ll leave you with this little video which seems to encapsulate crossing the Balearic spirit with something quintessentially English.

Naive Melody

Wednesday, January 27th, 2010

Kill the DJ

Kill the DJ


With giants like the warehouse project and sankeys constantly bringing in the biggest names in dance music to manchester, you may expect the independent nights to have subsided since the madchester days; quite the contrary though, the scene is thriving. Nights like contort yourself and cutloose are constantly showcasing some of the defining talent in their respective genres with The Roadhouse providing the perfect home for both nights.

This friday (29th Jan) sees a We Love… favourite appearing at another of manchester’s true success stories, Naive Melody. Having just celebrated their 4th birthday with Andrew Weatherall they continue to push the boat out with an appearance from Ivan Smagghe. Naive Melody, if you don’t already know, throw monthly parties at the 200 capacity Chinese Karaoke bar Charlies just off Portland Street. Over the course of their 4 year history they have brought in some fantastic names to this super-intimate venue, this coupled with a loyal following and good sound system has lead to some fantastic parties. Highlights have included sets from Alexander Robotonick, Bill Brewster and Krikor to name a few. If you’re ever in the area make sure you check it out.

We Love… Ibiza 2009 Episode 10 – Part 2 from We Love on Vimeo.