WashYourHands

Cat Malogen
the real sound of Glasgow - not the Sub Club or The Arches or whatever - is donk and bouncey house, that's what you hear blasting out of cars and in high street clubs at 3am

The licensing laws put a scundered full stop on venues, but part of the charm with Glasgow has been its all back to whoever’s where you could sofa roll with so many randoms. Not ideal, but different dynamics, sometimes more intimate in a profound way (aka the after party).

Sub with Harri, for a short period, was immense. Pure in Edinburgh was solid competition for madness

 

woops

is not like other people
everyone in glasgow lives in a gigantic house. living rooms bigger than a whole london flat.
 

Simon silverdollarcircle

Well-known member
I have made so many one-night best friends thanks to afterparties. So many people who've spilled their guts to me and told me all kinds of deep and important things that I'll probably never see again. It's great.
I made all my best friends at after parties. We'd spend weekend after weekend chatting shit to each other for about 40 hours solid.

I miss those days but they're still my best friends. And also it drives you mental after a few years i found
 

luka

Well-known member
I would never talk to a stranger let alone go back to theirs to get date raped or have my kidney stolen. No way hozay.
 

Simon silverdollarcircle

Well-known member
You always get one nutter at an afters that everyone tries to avoid tho. That's fun. Like someone trying to talk to anyone within earshot that they've invented their own currency or whatever. One time a bunch of Swedish girls thought it was essential to smash all the plates in the flat. With knives.
 
I think a possibly obvious point to make
Is that rave culture can be understood as a strange attractor and a gateway drug and catalyst rather than something with any inherent utopian properties beyond the aesthetic. Is that an obvious point to make?
 

version

Well-known member
I have made so many one-night best friends thanks to afterparties. So many people who've spilled their guts to me and told me all kinds of deep and important things that I'll probably never see again. It's great.
Sometimes it's easier to open up to strangers precisely because of that lack of attachment and the unlikelihood of seeing them again.
 

version

Well-known member
I think a possibly obvious point to make
Is that rave culture can be understood as a strange attractor and a gateway drug and catalyst rather than something with any inherent utopian properties beyond the aesthetic. Is that an obvious point to make?
A gateway to what?
 

Simon silverdollarcircle

Well-known member
Do you agree - not that I have used the phrase strange attractor! mathematics
I do yep. I guess the thing that rave did and can still do is very quickly show you- much of what you were told, and taught, and thought was wrong. But what you do with that revelation is up to you innit. People go all sorts of different ways
 
lots of things. any subculture accelerates and amplifies in that way but electronic music + drugs is especially void, abstract and kaleidoscopic
 

luka

Well-known member
I think a possibly obvious point to make
Is that rave culture can be understood as a strange attractor and a gateway drug and catalyst rather than something with any inherent utopian properties beyond the aesthetic. Is that an obvious point to make?
I don't understand it can you explain it
 
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