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Sun 26th Oct - NICKY HOLLOWAY & More at 4 Dame Lane

  • 15-09-2008 6:31pm
    #1
    Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 786 ✭✭✭


    Swirl-header.gif

    Subject / SWIRL Access All Areas
    Bank Holiday Sunday 26th October 2008 - 4 Dame Lane, Dublin 2


    Room 1 - Desert Island Disco [Disco. Classic House. Balearic]
    NICKY HOLLOWAY
    [Desert Island Disco, Special Branch, London]
    Stephen Manning
    [Space Camp / Night Flight]


    Room 2 - SWIRL [DeepFunkinBumpinHOUSEMusic]
    Joe Morrissey
    Mr Rossworth
    Ro Flynn
    Austin Molloy


    Doors 9pm - 2:30am | Adm: e10 / e5 | http://www.myspace.com/subjectevents

    nicky1je8.jpgnicky2ua2.jpg

    NICKY HOLLOWAY [Desert Island Disco] a [self-penned] introduction...

    Trying to write your own biography is incredibly hard and I have been
    putting it off for years. Lots has been written about me in the music
    press over the years, but it's pretty fragmented and usually only covered
    a brief snapshot of my career or the antics at the time, so, with the
    publication of my new website [www.desertislanddiscos.com] I thought it
    was the ideal opportunity to pull them all together and commit my personal
    story for the record. Anyway here goes...

    I was born in London in...let's just say the Swinging Sixties, and spent
    most of my school years playing truant and getting into trouble. I left
    school at fifteen without any qualifications, and started working in a
    menswear shop in North London. This would not last long and I soon got the
    sack for spending too much time in the record shop two doors away, but the
    seeds were sown for a career in music. Fast forward to 1979 and a
    sixteen-year old Nicky Holloway had just discovered clubs, lager and of
    course girls, and I found myself standing on the balcony at the Royalty
    Club in Southgate watching Froggy mixing two copies of Instant Funk's "I
    Got My Mind Made Up" and thinking, "I wanna to be a DJ" - which back in
    those days was hardly considered a good career move. I never had enough
    money to buy a set of decks (Technics 1200 had just come out) but I do
    remember waiting for Mum to go to work, so I could borrow her hi-fi and
    install it in my bedroom next to mine where I would practice for hours on
    end dreaming of the day when I actually played to a crowd, in fact come to
    think of it I was the original bedroom DJ.

    After numerous unsuccessful auditions, I finally found an agency that
    booked DJ's for the thriving Disco Pub scene that had sprung up around the
    Old Kent Road and in 1980 got my first ever paid gig. I started to work
    4-5 nights a week at various South London dives longing for the day when I
    would play in stylish venues and to bigger and better crowds. I finally
    realised that one way I could make this happen quicker was to put on my
    own parties. When I first started to organize nights out back in 1984 the
    whole club thing was very different from what we have come to expect in
    this day and age. Even if you were clued up, back in London in 1984 you
    had a very limited choice as to where you could spend your Saturday night.
    If you knew the score you managed to get hold of a ticket for one of my
    Special Branch parties or "Doo's", where, along with a relatively unknown
    at the time Pete Tong, we combined Hip Hop, Rare Groove, R&B and early
    House in one room while Gilles Peterson spun a more Jazzy eclectic mix in
    the other room. You could find me playing a similar selection on Friday
    nights at the legendary Royal Oak in Tooley Street but this was just a
    taster of things to come.

    By now I had really got the promotion bit between my teeth and between
    1984 and 1988 I put together sixteen "Doo at the Zoo's" at London Zoo,
    four Weekenders at Rockley Sands, and many other assorted one-offs at
    unique venues such as the Natural History Museum , Chislehurst Caves,
    Thorpe Park and even took three hundred people for their first taste of
    Ibiza – this is in 1985 a mere twenty one years ago, half of those that
    went on that trip are still known to be wandering around club land "'avin'
    it", even though they are all now well over thirty five! The Special
    Branch's reputation grew and grew until the end of 1987 when the whole of
    the club scene was about to be turned upside down, enter stage left, House
    music.

    1988 turned out to be one of those landmark years that will be embedded on
    peoples' brains for the rest of their lives, you only have to read one of
    the many books published that cover the period such as Adventures in
    Clubland, Once in a Lifetime, Class of '88 or Altered States to realize
    something happened that year that completely changed the face of clubbing.
    When I opened Trip at the Astoria in Charing Cross Road at the end of May
    1988, I was expecting to get somewhere between six and eight hundred
    people. Much to my delight and amazement two thousand clubbers turned up
    every Saturday for the next two years at what was probably the first big
    legal (for want of a better word) Acid House club with me and, for a year
    or so, Pete Tong as residents. The likes of Dave Morales, Todd Terry,
    Kevin Saunderson, Derek May and West Bam weren't anything like the
    legendary names they are now however, always the pioneering sort, I stuck
    my neck out a bit and gave them some of their first ever gigs in the UK
    during this period. Of course the exploding Acid House phenomenon couldn't
    stay out of the spotlight for long and I decided to change the name of
    Trip to Sin, because of the misinformed media exposure and panic tabloid
    journalism that Acid House was attracting at the time. It had also become
    a regular experience for the Charing Cross Road to be blocked with
    dancing, smiling faces when the club ended, the police at the time had
    absolutely no idea as to what was going on, and just stood back in
    amazement.

    During this period, with a concept loosely based upon the Caister Soul
    Weekenders that I grew up going to in the late Seventies and early
    Eighties, the Incredible Organization as my promotions company was then
    known, successfully managed to spirit away three thousand people for the
    whole weekend twice a year to the aptly named "KAOS Weekenders" at places
    such as Pontin's Holiday Camps at Camber Sands in Sussex and Hemsby in
    Norfolk. A monster had been created and like all good things there comes a
    time when it stops being fun and its time to move on. So that's what I
    did. In April 1990 I finally got my first club and wanted to put a bit of
    style back into clubbing, a baggy jumper, strobe and smoke machine were no
    longer good enough, enter the Milk Bar - with it's whiter than white image
    and strict door policy it stood out alone in clubland. With Paul
    Oakenfold's Friday nights, Pete Tong and Dave Dorrell's Saturday nights,
    Darren Emerson on Mondays, Danny Rampling's Pure Sexy and Glam on a
    Wednesdays and in the latter years Brandon Block and Lisa Loud F.U.B.A.R.
    on the Sunday night, its suffice to say the Milk Bar rocked! Dave Morales,
    Tony Humphries the Brand New Heavies all graced our presence and even a
    then unheard of Jamiroquai played one night at the club.

    During the summer of '92 we also opened up a couple of bars in Ibiza under
    the Milk Bar banner which ran successfully for a couple of seasons while I
    managed to get Ibiza out of my system. I wanted to stay on the Island for
    the whole summer, so I had to get my own bars going – didn't want to have
    to buy any drinks now, did I! Journalists often ask me what's the best
    night I've ever put on, which is a tough one to answer. There have been so
    many good nights over my twenty six years of DJ'ing that to pick one is
    hard work, however one event that I'm really proud of and which was a
    spectacular achievement by anyone's standards was back in 1993 when we
    took three thousand clubbers to Euro Disney in Paris for a one-off event
    named Dance Europe .This was originally supposed to be on site at Disney
    until three weeks before, when Disney Corp got cold feet and cancelled the
    event, worried about their family image and anticipating the potential for
    "Mickey Mouse on Acid" stories in the press. Determined not to be beaten I
    jumped on the train went over to Paris, secured 13 hotels nearest to
    Disney for the accommodation and bought three thousand passes for Disney
    which are valid for any day so they could not stop us using them. The
    event went off despite all odds and non-stop rain, and was very memorable.
    After the lease on the Milk Bar ran out in 1994 it was time to find a new
    home for my nocturnal activities. As with several things in my life,
    purely by accident I managed to find a site just around the corner from
    the Milk Bar in an old Salsa Restaurant and the Velvet Underground was
    born. In the three years that I was at the helm of the club it fair to say
    that everyone who was anyone in dance music graced the decks there. During
    this period We also opened MARS back on the old Milk Bar site (on a short
    lease) which while only ran for a couple of years was still successful and
    organized dozens of other one -offs. But life doesn't always go the way
    you want it. To finance a new club project I sold my stake in the clubs to
    my former partner Leon and proceeded to waste a year and a half of my life
    and all the money I had on getting a big new club in Soho off the ground,
    which sadly due to planning permission never happened...

    These days, as well as production for many music clients, and myself, I
    still find time for three or four DJ gigs a month, a fair number of which
    are abroad - which I enjoy the most. I'm lucky enough to have travelled
    the world with a set of headphones and have made some great friends in
    many countries.


    More at:
    http://www.myspace.com/subjectevents
    http://www.desertislanddiscos.com
    http://www.subjectevents.bebo.com
    http://www.nickyholloway.com
    http://www.subjectevents.com
    http://www.spacecamp.ie

    Subject / SWIRL Access All Areas
    Bank Holiday Sun 26th October 2008 - 4 Dame Lane, Dublin 2 w/
    NICKY HOLLOWAY, Stephen Manning & SWIRL Residents...

    Adm: e10 [e5 b4 11pm] | Doors 9pm - 2:30am | More info:
    http://www.myspace.com/subjectevents /// http://www.subjectevents.bebo.com
    Facebook: 'Subject Dublin' /// Mailing List: info[at]subjectevents[dot]com


Comments

  • Closed Accounts Posts: 5,531 ✭✭✭jonny68


    Goodness me i almost missed this i cant believe Nicky is playing in Dublin, legendary DJ will defo have to try get along to this.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 786 ✭✭✭Subject


    nickyholloway4vv9.jpg


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 5,531 ✭✭✭jonny68


    Respect guys this is excellent value for money compared to other greedy promoters.

    Looks like im gonna be club hopping that nite as Joey Negro is on the same nite and i wanna see both DJ's.:D


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 786 ✭✭✭Subject


    Nicky's top Balearic moments...

    M1 – Feel The Drums
    It was just a groove that really reminds me of the summer of ’93.
    Watch / Listen: HERE

    Kenny Jammin’ Jason – Can U Dance
    An early house track that always reminds me of the early years.
    Watch / Listen: HERE

    Art Of Noise – Moments In Love
    A superb chill out record.
    Watch / Listen: HERE

    Banderas – This Is Your Life
    A great Balearic track that was played in the clubs for quiet a while.
    Watch / Listen: HERE

    Stephen Manning - Cosmic Disco Mix: HERE

    * FREE CD's * We'll have 50 CD's of Sub:Mix:One, mixed by Billy Scurry to giveaway on Sunday. Just ask!


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