Posted in Music on May 3, 2011|
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This article, on Dublin’s burgeoning underground dance scene, was written in March 2011, and published in shortened form in the latest issue of Look Left and has now been uploaded in full on the blog.
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The economic recession coupled with tight nightclub licensing laws has led to a proliferation of D.I.Y., independent after-hour parties, raves and club-nights in Dublin. People have become fed up with being overcharged for alcohol in bars and being turfed out at 2:30am due to the strict licensing laws. It is still a little known fact that Ireland has the earliest nightclub closing times in Europe. Instead of sitting around and simply complaining, various groups are channelling their anger and efforts into coming together and organising their own events which often bend or break the rules.
The response of the Garda has been swift and harsh. Numerous underground, late night and BYOB events have been shut down by the police in the last six months. Undeterred, music and art collectives have reacted to this clampdown by adjusting the way they publicise and organise events in order to dupe the authorities.
Last November this author along with around three-hundred other individuals boarded a fleet of double-decker buses on the quays on a cold Saturday night at 1am. After a twenty-minute drive we found ourselves stepping out from the bus and into an empty industrial estate in the south-west of the city. We were here for a large, after-hours rave in a disused warehouse which was rented for the night by a small group of DJs and promoters. It was a unifying experience. Young lads barely out of school from local housing estates chatted to middle-aged ravers who had been around for the first wave of Acid House in 1988 – 1992. Some people were on the chemical MDMA otherwise known as ‘ecstasy’, others weren’t. Some people brought along beer or other alcoholic drinks, others didn’t.

Warehouse Collective, November 2010. Photo - Lucia Mather
There was no reported acts of violence or theft, an all too common occurrence in our city’s clubs and streets at night. Everyone had come to listen to the music, dance and have a good time in an environment that was outside of the control of overzealous Garda, greedy publicans or thuggish bouncers. Events like these, albeit on a smaller scale, are happening every weekend in the city. Nights don’t finish at 2:30am anymore, people see it as half-time.
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