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Archive for September, 2008

Scratch Club presents: Dj Q Bert

Friday, September 19th, 2008

Scratch Club presents DJ Q Bert (13/09/08)

DJ Q Bert is widely regarded as the best DJ in the world, with 4 world DMC championships, an entry to the Technics DJ hall of fame and his work with Vestax to develop his own turntable; it’s easy to see why.

Considering these credentials it was an absolute blessing for the Scratch Club guys to bring him to the Rainbow Warehouse for one of two UK dates this year. With the other appearance being in the mighty Fabric in London, this night was always set to be huge.

From the word go it was obvious that the Birmingham Hip-Hop heads were out in force for this night, all sporting a little cheeky grin. With the line-up of support looking magical, these smiles could only continue to creep up their faces.

The venue was filling up nicely with Scratch Club residents holding the fort in The Beach and The Warehouse. Three times UK DMC Champion DJ Switch took to the stage, his consistently energetic and amazing turntable wizardry, really took the night up a level. The ever charismatic flow of Redbeard maintained the vibe, whilst the stunning stage presence and unison of energy from the Playaz Cliq boys had every head nodding in the place, with the perfect set to get the crowd hyped for DJ Q-Bert. The “shamanic beatbox explorer” MC Xander impressed the crowds with his massively dynamic, mind blowing beat box skills.

Now it was time for the man himself, DJ Q-Bert, and it really doesn’t matter how much footage you see of this guy, when he is there in front of you it’s a whole new level. Props are due to MC Kingpin who did an absolutely fantastic job of keeping the crowd hanging off the rafters, whilst Q-Bert gave us a lesson on all things turntable. He cut, juggled, drummed and crabbed his way through an amazing array of records, whilst the structure of the set was constantly picking up pace. This guy performs skills of the highest caliber with inch perfect precision, whilst smiling for a camera, ridiculous. Big up to Q-Bert for an extremely special set.


DJ Q Bert was followed by the amazing Mc Mash Clan who really boosted the tempo with an upfront and meticulous blend of d’n'b, breaks, dubstep, techno, hardcore, electro, gabba, jungle, hip hop, reggae, breakcore and psytrance.

Props are also due to everyone involved in making this night happen and a massive shout to Bass6 for doing a wonderful job of hosting the night. Everyone in the perfect Hip-Hop venue felt the full force of the Birmingham Hip-Hop scene, and anyone who had lost faith in the scene had their confidence more than fully restored. This night has set the bar very high for things to come. Watch out Birmingham!

Words: Josh Thomas
Photography: Tom Horton

You can see the rest of Tom’s photos from this night over here: Photos of Dj Qbert, Rainbow Warehouse

Project X Presents - Putting the “Art” in Party

Thursday, September 18th, 2008

Putting the “Art“ in “Party“
(Project X Presents - 13th September at “Busk“)

In a world full of flyers swirling past our eyes and ears like dollar bills on a bad game show, these cardboard diplomats claiming to offer “an eclectic range of music”, turn out to be, more often than not, mere cool-kid propaganda. Stagnant club nights trying to pull a new crowd with a DJ with a big record collection and some nice words. Sometimes, however, we are lucky enough to pull out a golden ticket in amongst the small change.

Enter Project X.

It is not a club night. It is an event. Something to put into the calendar next to Auntie Maud’s birthday and your dental appointment (for those of us who can still afford to have their teeth looked after). Project X does not commit to one style of music. It does not project a single image of itself. It has no number. In its own words, it is an “Omnimedia experience”, and it certainly has a transcendental quality.

I have noticed that where there is an interest in getting underground talent onstage, professionalism often gets sacrificed. Saturday night, however, was supremely smooth in its execution, implementing a brilliant set up consisting of 2 adjacent stages, allowing acts to flow truly seamlessly, often leading into each other in overlap.

With a dense line-up, it was difficult to see everyone, but there were a few eclectic treats that stood out for me. Firstly, local literary lunatics Wrote Under took the stage early on in the night and gave a varied selection of words, from excellent spoken word from Louis Campbell to stream of consciousness strangeness from Jimmy Fantastic, all wrapped up by Birmingham poetry mascot, Big Bren.

Shana Tova provided a balanced combination twixt raucous flair and strong pop sensibilities with catchy indie tunes that make you nod your head before your neck knows what it‘s doing. I noted in particular some brilliant lyrical gems in amongst the often deceptively sweet riffs.

Aa’shiq al Rasul blew me away with their multilingual meditations and I could tell from looking at the audience, that the on-stage trance of the musicians was contagious. It was a genuinely beautiful experience and the use of Urdu and Arabic was fascinating.

Twice Perrier award nominee and Project X regular, Reginald D Hunter, who till now I had not had the pleasure of witnessing, literally gave me a side stitch I laughed so continuously. His rapport with the crowd is brilliant and though he truly owns the stage from the moment he gets up there, his hilarity extends to the rest of reality as a chat in the smoking area with him proved, as he continued to force a smile into my cheeks which were still hurting from his set. Clearly success at the fringe and a few appearances on “Have I Got News For You” have not affected his ego.
Hailing from West-Brom, Cellardoor pumped the speakers full of quality atmospheric post-rock. I am sure their sound takes inspiration from forms of hypnosis, and with a theme of “digital dystopia”, perhaps this feeling was intended as a mind altering antidote to the subliminal messaging we receive through the many screens we use each day.

Pianist Richard Batsford mesmerised the audience with beautiful arpeggiated soundscapes reminiscent of Rick Wakeman’s later solo work. What really stole the show, however, was an accompanying piece of expressive dance which I found genuinely touching. Beginning with a single dancer, later joined by a second, they told a passionate narrative of 2 lovers through a combination of balletic, contemporary and abstract movement in a confined space no greater that 3 metres by 2. Sadly I have no recollection of their names being announced, so cannot credit their impressive performance.

Project X draws a crowd receptive to beauty from any background. As a member of the audience, you feel like a neuron in a collective brain. Indeed, every person I stopped to talk to was creatively active in some form or other, be it a gigging musician, club promoter, studying photographer or bedroom poet.  Project X is the world wide web of synapses that connect these creative energies. The wires that criss and cross between minds and provide a platform for communal innovation.

A dreamlike state of mind is induced by the experience of being at Project X (influenced greatly by the futuristic decor and fantastic performance art troupe “Object X”, who admirably never once came out of their cyborg characters), but then you stand back and realise the truly awesome degree of effort and meticulous preparation that goes into such a production. It goes without saying that Project X is a non-profit organisation, and it is clear that every penny that is made goes straight back into making the next event even more impressive.

The Flyer for this Project X claimed “an unforgettable night”, and were it not for having experienced the quality of previous events under the same banner, I would most likely scoff at the seemingly premature confidence, yet now that I stand on the other side of the weekend, I think it is fair to allow the organisers a great deal of confidence. Hell! Let them have a little smugness too for having pulled off such a happening quite so flawlessly. Past Project X events have also been impressive and interesting, but this “Digital Dystopia” I think marks a real fruition of collective efforts that deserves all the praise it gets.

Aside from blowing people’s minds and keeping them greatly entertained, the true success in Project X is in turning up the volume on the crème de la crème of the Birmingham underground and giving me that feeling that hasn’t been dared for a while: being proud of Birmingham (gasp!). Yes, I said it, and maybe it’s about time you did too.

Words: Dominik Kai Brotherton
Photography: Alina Ha

Djoust - Midlands Heats, Rainbow

Wednesday, September 10th, 2008

D Joust - Midlands Heats, 6th September, Rainbow

The Midlands Djoust heats kicked off at the Rainbow back in August, and the second heat was held last sat 6th September. Dj RCaine (Russ to his friends), is a top notch dj and was host to the midlands heats, from previous experience we knew we were in for a quality nights entertainment and hard wax grooving.

Dj’s battled it out in the Rainbow’s very own courtyard, and played a varied mixture from Jackin’ House to Minimal and Techno. Competition was tight, and not suprising since they were all battling for a place in the next stage of the competition, taking place in London.

Keeping score were experienced Dj’s and judges, Boogie Dave, Viny Kohli and Russ RCaine. Bass6 worked hard all night providing MC support.

Up to battle were EnigmatiK (Worcester), DJ Adam Horton (West Midlands), MissB (Barnsley), DJ Chris Kitchen (Mersyside) and Shep (Newcastle).

The judges were in for a tough time, as every single one of the Dj’s smashed the crowds with tight, thoughtful and creative sets. However, after a tight fight, and lots of pondering and adding up of numbers, it was MissB who was crowned best of the Midlands/North and is now getting ready to skip down to London to continue her quest for the DJoust 2008 title.

Photography: Alina Ha

Dj Qbert Comes to Town 13th September

Thursday, September 4th, 2008

Scratch Club present Dj Qbert, 13th September, Rainbow Warehouse

DJ Qbert is a legend amongst the scratch fraternity, and hardly suprising since he is a 4x world DMC champion. He is a member of the DJ hall of fame and an ex-member of the invisibl skratch picklz, alongside Mixmaster Mike of the Beastie Boys.

The last time we saw Dj Qbert in Birmingham was back in 2005 at the Medicine Bar (we have the pics to prove it, see below!), so its about time we saw a return and this time to the all new Rainbow Warehouse.

Dj Qbert is only making two UK appearances this year, with the other being at the mighty Fabric in London, so Birmingham should be feeling mighty proud and lucky to be playing host.

You can go view the event here on woib and buy tickets

Support acts on the night include:

Automaton (satamile records)
Dj Switch (3x UK DMC Champion - see here for my review and photos)
mc xander (live shamanic beatbox explorer)
the mc mash clan (braindrop, london)

This really is going to be a fantastic night of world class scratching ad general turntable madness (did I mention Qbert uses his own unique design of turntable?) - and with these sort of world class perfomances few and far bwteen, we suggest you bag yourself a ticket quick, as we reckon this ones gonna be kicking off with people hanging from the rafters.

Tom Horton



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