48

November edition of BN1 Magazine

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

Brighton's best Community and Lifestyle Magazine!

Citation preview

Page 1: November edition of BN1 Magazine
Page 2: November edition of BN1 Magazine

C

M

Y

CM

MY

CY

CMY

K

A5 VIVID AD.pdf 1 23/10/2009 11:47

Page 3: November edition of BN1 Magazine

C

M

Y

CM

MY

CY

CMY

K

A5 VIVID AD.pdf 1 23/10/2009 11:47

CONTENTS

Become a Facebook or Myspace fan!Now with Exclusive prizes and information on offer to Facebook members

All rights reserved including rights of reproduction and use in any forms or by any means, including the making of copies by any photo process or by any electronic or mechanical device (printed, written or oral), unless permission in writing is obtained from the copyright proprietor. All textual content, design graphics, images and specific photographs used in the magazine are Copyright © BN1 Magazine 2009

Contributions/Journalists:Stuart RoltImmanuel GuffoggAndy HollisJohn HeavensJen BlakeleyDan KilloranLeigh HigginsEllie TalebianJames RowlandJoel Windels

Meet the TeamProject Manager/Editor - Chris SadlerAssistant Editor - Jen BlakeleyIllustrations - Natalie Gore [email protected] - Chris Sadler

Photographers:Dave Smith - www.photosbydave.org.ukOli Lyons - www.myspace.com/OBLphotographyJoshua Dylan RedfearnJames RowlandCraig Swatton - www.craigswatton.co.uk

Printed by vivid design & printwww.vividbrighton.co.uk

Will NolanDeborah FairfieldChris WoodwardMatt PhillipsChris TaylorGreg SickNick TitchnerJ.D. BachelorPaul Hayward

Visit www.bn1magazine.co.uk for the extended version!

ADVERTISING:[email protected] Tel: 01273 737397

LISTINGS:[email protected]

all other enquiries:[email protected]

Pg No.4. A Guide to What’s on in November6. Interview with Rob Luis ‘Tru Thoughts’8. BN1’s Live Music Guide 14. bnw productions @ Ocean Rooms16. Brighton Live Review18. ZT Fight Night @ Hove Town Hall 18. Food & Drink22. INTERVIEW with OJOS DE BRUJO22. October In Pictures24. INTERVIEW - BRIGHTON’S HIP-HOP SENSATION ‘SPECIAL SCHOOL’26. Entertainment28. Speacial School Interview30. Brighton & Hove Albion31. Community - My BUs32. Arts & Culture - Fabrica - Tina Gonsalves ‘Chameleon’33. LISTINGS!47. Puzzles: Sudoku & Quick Crossword

If you would like to write to us with your views or opinions please send to [email protected]

CONTACT:

Page 4: November edition of BN1 Magazine

A Quick view of what’s on in November:

Bent DoubleKomediaSunday 1st Nov £8 - £20Zoe Lyons hosts an irreverent night of fun and frolics. This monthly event attracts a variety of top flight comics, ensuring this one not to miss.

www.komedia.co.uk/brighton

Our Man In HavanaTheatre Royal BrightonMonday 2nd to Saturday 7th Nov £16 - £30 Grahame Greene’s timeless farcical tale about a vacuum cleaner salesman caught up in the shady world of espionage, purely so he can afford to buy his daughter a pony for her birthday.

www.ambassadortickets.com/Theatre-Royal-Brighton

Late Night Gimp Fight Upstairs at Three and TenSaturday 7th NovThe world's first gimp-based sketch comedy show hits Brighton with whips and tassels swinging! Come and see why 2009 has been dubbed Year of the Gimp. Uproarious sketches, music and gimps.I love this town. You just don’t get this kind of thing in Worth-ing.

www.upstairsatthreeandten.co.ukwww.latenightgimpfight.com

Daniel Kitson We Are Gathered HerePavilion TheatreTuesday 10th to Wednesday 11th Nov £10

Dial 'M' For MurderTheatre Royal BrightonTuesday 17th to Saturday 21st Nov £18 - £24 Former tennis pro Tony Wendice found out many months ago that his wife Margot was in love with another man, Mark Halliday, an American author of crime novels. So after many weeks of plan-ning, Tony sets in motion the perfect plan to kill his wife. The only problem is there's no such thing as a perfect murder, or is there?

www.ambassadortickets.com/Theatre-Royal-Brighton

With more awards to his name than you could probably carry in one go, Kitson is one of the heavyweights of the stand-up scene.

www.brightondome.org

Count Arthur Strong's Radio Show! Komedia Sunday 7th Nov Steve Delaney’s malapropism laden actor returns to Brighton for another show. Tourettic tics, false starts and nervous fumbling, badly covered up by a delicate sheen of bravado and self-assurance.Tickets FREE. Bookings taken by 'phone only.Call 0845 293 8480 (between Tuesday & Saturday, 12:00-6:30pm)

www.komedia.co.uk/brighton

Brian Gittins and Friends Upstairs at Three and TenThursday 12th £6/£8Brian Gittins, 42, is a roadside cafe owner from Pyecombe. Every month, Brian and his partner in crime, Angelos Epithemiou, introduce two acts they've met on the circuit and somehow co-opted to perform.

www.upstairsatthreeandten.co.uk

Page 5: November edition of BN1 Magazine

The Flickermanon RadioReverb 97.7fm8th November 2009 21:00

Following a series of interna-tional acclaimed radio broad-casts the interactiveonline/radio drama series The Flickerman is finally returning home, with a series of broadcasts on Brighton’s own community radio station, Radio Reverb 97.2fm

Page 6: November edition of BN1 Magazine

BN1 talks to Rob-Luis, Head of Quality Control, for TRU THOUGHTS, Brighton’s world famous record Label.

In October, Tru Thoughts celebrated their tenth birthday at the Brighton Coalition. The enor-mous turnout was testament to the continuing strength of this indie label which refreshingly structures the business around the music rather than the other way round. In the wake of the Tru thoughts tenth anniversary party, BN1 caught up with Rob Luis, “the ears” of the label which originally gave us Bonobo and continues to release for Quantic, the Quantic Soul Orchestra and Nostalgia 77.

BN1: “So Rob, your tenth Birth-day at the Coalition was more than certainly a success, do you think it demonstrated a large awareness of your label and its output?”

Rob Luis: “Definitely. People kept coming up to me all night and wishing us a happy birthday.”

BN1: “With a successful tenth anniversary behind Tru thoughts,

what can you tell us about your plans for next year?”

Rob Luis: “Well I can’t give away too much, but there are plans for a regular club night and at least 14 new releases including some new signings and releases for the bamboos, Zero BB and Quantic. We’re also planning a Shapes compilation.”

BN1: “ I noticed a lot of Dubstep being played at your night at the coalition, that’s not something I’d typically associate with Tru thoughts, is dubstep something that will increasingly come to characterize the label and the artists its signs?”

Rob Luis: “Again that’s some-thing that I can’t give away too much about but we’ve been chatting to someone in that scene. Personally my background is as a DJ, in fact it was probably me playing the Dubstep you heard and it’s clear that Dubstep has a large dance-floor appeal. That’s something I’m very aware of.”

BN1: “With regards new signings, do you guys source most of the new artists yourself or do you

wade through a tonne of demos that people send in.”

Rob Luis: “Well, like I said my background is a DJ and I buy a lot of records to play. Often I will come across an artist approach them to discuss putting out material with us. For instance I had a bamboo LP before we signed them. At the moment though I’d say we receive about three to five demos a day and I personally listen to every one. D-flat and Stonephace are two artists which sent in their material and were subsequently signed to the label in this way.”

BN1: “So you actively encourage new artists sending you their material. Is there a best way an artist can do this to get your attention?”

Rob Luis: “With computers increasingly aiding home produc-tion there is a certain level of production we look for. However I will often talk to people who have sent us a demo and told them just to keep in touch and often given them recommendations about how to improve their output. What I would recommend if you are sending us tracks, is to just send us your three best songs rather than your three best songs spaced out over an albums worth of other material. There are things we really need if people are planning on sending us material which artists may take for granted. We actually have a section on our website dedicated to recommend-ing the format which will best get our attention.”

For existing and upcoming releases, tour dates or to find out more about sending material to Tru Thoughts, visit

www.tru-thoughts.co.uk.

By Manny

Photo: Craig Swatton

Page 7: November edition of BN1 Magazine

Two Spot Gobi, Bushwalla and Koala Friday, Komedia, Tuesday 10th November. 7pm – Mid-night.

We’re chuffed that Brighton’s best (in our opinion!) band Two Spot Gobi, are back from their Summer in California, and are going to be back playing at Komedia, home to some of their finest gigs to date.And if it wasn't enough for them to be playing at one of Brighton's finest music joints, they are going to be joined by the amazing Bushwalla! This crazy haired maestro is set to entertain the masses like no other.

Opening up the proceedings will be super-tight local band Koala Friday. They have been recording some seriously cool new music in Wales over the past few weeks, so make sure you get there early to catch all the excitement!

Tickets available now for a mere £6 from the Komedia Box Office, online or by calling 0845 293 8480

When going to see bands perform outside of the era in which they made their name; after the decade when they spoke to an eager generation that were in tune with the message their music was sending out, there is always the risk that parts of the act will be lost in transla-tion or simply that the group just can’t rework the magic they once had. The Slits are the seminal all female punk group of the late seventies and tales of their outlandish live performanc-es and unique performance style precede them. On a new tour and promoting their new album, ‘Trapped Animal’, the girls steamed into Brighton on an unusually warm October evening to showcase their raw unadulterated brand of reggae-punk to the stages of the Concorde 2. Would the Slits still be up to unleashing hell on stage after all these years? There was only one way to find out….

As the lights went down and supporting act, Wet Dog took the stage, there was an embarrass-ingly miniscule crowd dispersed in the venue and I was hoping that this was just one of those cases of the audience being fashionably late, luckily I was right and although Wet Dog had to perform to a disappoint-

ingly small, yet enthusiastic crowd (lovingly fronted by the Slit’s front woman), by the time the main act took to the stage there was a sea of eager punters stretching back as far as I could see.

Lead singer Ari Up was a true force to be reckoned with from the moment she bounded onto the stage with an impressive fountain of dreadlocks piled on her head and an outfit that that only could be described as a futuristic mix of seventies retro and cheeky country girl. The band’s current incarnation consisted of the aforementioned Ari Up; initial founder of the Slits, alongside long term bass-ist, Tessa Pollitt and three new recruits; Anna Schlute, Adele Wilson and Hollie Cook (who is the daughter of Sex Pistols drummer Paul Cook). The girls burst into renditions of songs from their debut album, ‘Cut’, and Ari’s distinctive bird noises and singing style were soon fill-ing the venue getting a loyal fan base moving on the dance floor.

Ari Up is one of those people that was born to be a fronting a band, she oozed heaps of self confidence intertwined with boundless energy and a good sense of humour. Highlights of

the evening certainly have to include the live fight on stage with keyboard player Hollie, and Ari’s booty-shaking danc-ing in various states of undress throughout the show. The music flitted from raw punk anthems so grinding reggae and dancehall beats in the blink of an eye. The band played tracks from their new album but inevitably the biggest crowd pleasers were their famous hits from ‘back in the day’; ‘Heard it Through the Grapevine’, ‘Typical Girls’ and ‘Shoplifting’.

The whole set was a joy to watch from start to finish as up on stage were band mem-bers that had a lot of love for each other and who obviously enjoyed playing together. It was also great to see a bunch of females on stage really show-ing that they could musically square up to the boys who so often are the forerunners in this type of music. Could the Slits still create that magic on stage they once had? Well, I wasn’t there the first time round but, if I had been and they performed anything like they did at this show, I would not have been disappointed.

By Jen Blakeley

The Slits 10th October - Review

Two Spot Gobi

www.bn1magazine.co.uk

Page 8: November edition of BN1 Magazine
Page 9: November edition of BN1 Magazine
Page 10: November edition of BN1 Magazine
Page 11: November edition of BN1 Magazine
Page 12: November edition of BN1 Magazine

Ugly DucklingDigital -23rd November

On Monday the 23rd November, HipHop veterans Ugly Duckling are going to take us on another Journey To Anywhere as they weave their masterful lyrics around us, leaving us bumping around to fresh beats and classic hits, and completely overwhelmed by their original and lovable style. These guys really are the bees’ knees of HipHop from the US, and their undeniable style is sure to get us all dancing, singing, rapping along and their personalities alone will leave us wanting more. As far as freshness goes, this trio summon up rap from all corners of the globe, and present it in such a way that once the night is over you feel as if you’ve seen both a show and a live band perform. With charisma and personality going through the roof, this is an event for anybody that wants to have tons of fun and enjoy some slick lyrics and turntablism in a prime HipHop environment. Digital is ideal for U.D, it is intimate but with plenty of space to dance. We at BN1 would not miss this one for the world, these guys are amazing.(WN)

The Specials –

19th November - Brighton Centre

Pioneers of the Punk and ska era, the Specials began the British ska revival movement combining rock steady beats with punk's energy and mind-set, and Brighton is lucky enough to welcome them later this month. They will be playing in the one and only Brighton Centre on Thursday 19th November, and, taking on a more determined and clued-up social stance than their predecessors, The Specials guarantee a night of undeniable musical meaning and lyrical mastery. This stands as one of Brighton’s most important events for ska-lovers and skankers alike for months to come, as these veterans of the industry are sure to take us for an unforgettable ride on this winter’s night. The Brighton Centre is ideal for such a big name act; the expansive centre never fails to satisfy with live events and we at BN1 will not miss this event. We will be there with our skanking shoes at the ready, and advise you to do the same. Officially: We Can. Not. Wait.(WN)

The Los Angeles Times and The Independent both named VV Brown as an artist to watch in 2009. High praise indeed but P. Diddy’s failed attempt to sign VV Brown to Bad-Boy Records bestows an additional credibility upon this artist who also turned down a place at Oxford. Brown’s debut album, travelling like the light, on which she wrote all the music and played many of the instruments, was nominated for the BBC’s sound of 2009 award. In Brown’s own words it is “musical mashed potatoes” and according to the Los Angeles Times it is a work of “pure, whimsical fun”. Drawing inspiration from the music of the 1950s and Nintendo sounds, VV Brown brings her joyful brand of retro indie punk rock to the Concorde II this November. Doors Open 20:00, ages 14+, tickets £7.50 in adv + bf, live (tickets available). (IG)

VV Brown18th Nov - Concorde2.

Page 13: November edition of BN1 Magazine

Formerly signed to Brighton’s own Tru thoughts label, Alice Russell is best known for her vocal work with Will Holand (Quantic and The Quantic Soul Orchestra) and Nostalgia 77 with which performed lead vocals in a cover of The White Stripe’s track, ‘Seven Nation Army’. Whilst also working with Mr Scruff, Russell’s solo work is performed in a nine-piece band rather straightforwardly called ‘Alice Russell live’. The group will which have at least four albums of material to draw from when they bring their lavish modern soul and mo-town to the Komedia this November. Doors open 19:30, tickets are £12.50 and available online. (WN)

12 Stone Toddler19th November - Komedia. Brighton source magazine has already tipped Brighton’s own catchy, indie pop-rock outfit, 12 Stone Toddler, to make it “big”. With a summer of festivals including Glastonbury, radio play on radio 2 and radio 6 and live radio sessions with Mark Lamarr and Tom Robinson behind them, 12 Stone Toddler do seem set for the bright lights and the big stage. Playing to an established fan-base at the Komedia certainly won’t be ‘make or break’ for this theatrical indie band who have already have two albums and a brand new single out. Doors open at 19:30, tickets are £8 and available online. First 50 through the door receive a free album.(IG)

Led Bib 28th November - The Old Market.

Death-jazz-math-cum-freak-out, Led Bib, are winners of the 2005 Peter Whittingham jazz award and Mercury Music prize nominees. They combine the technical virtuosity of trained jazz musicians with the exhilarating passion and fury of rock and roll. The Times described this group as “the future of jazz” and their musical flare has converted many to the genre. Doors open 7pm/performance from 8pm, tickets: £8 adv.(IG)

Alice Russell25th November - Komedia.

www.bn1magazine.co.uk

Music

Page 14: November edition of BN1 Magazine

Manouchska Meets Trousseaux

After a somewhat entertain-ing hour long session of power failures and edgy sound checks at the hands of the opening two artists, Saturday evening’s entertainment at the Ocean Rooms finally got under way and the doors flew open to a not so large hoard of people. The stage was set for a small scale collection of bands and fans to sway the night away to a quirky if not eclectic mix of Brighton based musicians. Both of the opening acts of the evening had interesting stories to tell, which was reflected in their contrasting styles of gypsy ska (Manouchska) and haunting contemporary rock (Trous-seaux). Manouchska had a sound which was so inconsistent that it is either symbolic of their sheer ability as musicians to apply their skills to many disciplines, or that they simply have little direction. Despite my deeply en-trenched cynicism with regard to the integrity of some musicians, I am inclined to believe that it is perhaps a combination of the

two. It soon became apparent that funnily enough, they have the talent to be free spirited and thus they maintained little direc-tion successfully. At any given moment they seemed to move between Parisian jazz, gypsy folk, ska and punk. Possible influences to sight would have to be The Clash, The Specials, Steve Earl and Orchestra Baobab. (For those of you unfamiliar with the latter check out this fusion of Afro-Cuban jazz music at www.myspace.com/orchestrabaobabofficial). Manouchska overlapped chilled reggae beats with a gritty and at times vicious overtone synonymous with ska and punk. The result was effective and yet a little frustrating, never really knowing where any one beat was going is perhaps indicative of little musical structure in their songs. However, it was never dull and the volatile nature of Manouchska’s music is arguably what good live acts are about, unpredictability. Where Cash smashed stage lights and Dylan

went electric Manouchska harnessed no discernable genre whatsoever. The standout track for this reporter was ‘Yankee Dollar’, a song written about the prostitution industry. Their scratchy aggressive style was the perfect tool to give more emphasis to the lyrical content which focussed on the tough and precarious life of a street walker. Next in line for the night were Trousseaux with their brand of ghostly alternative rock, serving as the perfect contrast to the edgy gypsy rockers who opened the bill.

The lead singer and leader of Trousseaux, Virginie Lauret, explained to me the significance of her band’s name in the following way; her French origins inspired the use of the term that translates as a bundle or collection of things bound together, like a band, hence the use of ‘Trousseaux’. The incred-ibly apt band name aside, the act perhaps suffered most from the small venue which unfortunately couldn’t successfully harness the darker intense sound of Lauret’s group. Every separate aspect of the music was so tightly bound together at times they were indeed a trousseaux, a bundle of evidently talented musicians who at times couldn’t stand out from one another. The vocals simply struggled to come through and for such an intimate venue the fact of the matter is you expect to be able to grasp all the areas of the music. However, despite the fact that they failed

A night In with BNW Productions

Page 15: November edition of BN1 Magazine

to really do themselves justice here I would highly recommend you give them a look else where. Tracks such as ‘La Nuit’ that did penetrate the unrelenting blur of sound showed Trous-seaux’s song writing ability in abundance. Their influences as sighted on their myspace page such as Belle and Sebastian, Regina Spektor and Animal Collective became more and more apparent with their guitar heavy yet soulful sound. Ultimately, despite their struggle with their own limitations in a venue of this size they produced a solid session of musical expression, which was perhaps less effective than that of Manouchska, but no less exceptional in its musical pretensions.

by James Rowland.

www.bn1magazine.co.uk

Brighton Live

Page 16: November edition of BN1 Magazine

Where the first half of the week sees the streets patrolled by countless processions of police vehicles, the streets in the second half is seemingly taken over by wandering packs of young people with soft guitar cases strapped to their backs. These itinerant herds, with their dorsal fin-like nylon append-ages, are not representatives of a bizarre emergent branch of gang culture but part of the enormous number of performers appearing at this year’s BrightonLive music festival.

Born from a shared yearning to promote Brighton and Hove’s substantial music scene, this four day extravaganza aims to give the city’s unsigned bands and musicians a platform to reach out to new audiences.Featuring over 150 bands display-ing their wares at 20+ venues, this enormous celebration of local music does seem to provide something of a headache for any naive prospective reviewer. Undaunted by the size of the event we blithely vow to cram in as many bands as possible.The start of the event is an understated, but quite beautiful unplugged show from Walker. The sentimental, and occasionally melancholic, songs from this act are reminiscent of the more

contemplative of Neil Young’s early compositions. The Unitarian Church on New Road provides a strangely fitting venue for this gentle acoustic lunchtime performance, in the first of a series of gigs organised by BBC Southern Counties as their contribution to the festival. The start of the Wednesday night promises a rockier stable of bands, as our tightly planned timetable takes us down to Audio to take a peek at Gentlemen Starkey.We are instead met with 70’s Cop and their fiery angst-ridden hard-rocking wall of sound. Sporting a new drummer, prompt-ing rumours of the previous drum-mer’s demise in a bizarre Spinal Tap style incident, they play a superb set. It soon becomes evident that the order that the bands feature on the website bears no relation at all to the actual order of things. Refusing to be unnerved by our now inadequate preparations we press on into the night, willing to now let luck dictate what bands we see. We wander round to the Latest Music Bar and thankfully catch Duke Raoul and their sweep-ing indie-style strumming tearing up the upstairs bar. They’ve attracted a good sized crowd, and make it look ever so effortless.We pop back round the corner to

check out what’s happening at Audio. This time we actually get to see Gentlemen Starkey. They don’t fail to deliver either.Their spacious surf-rock is a glorious melange of influences and lead singer Joel is clearly a born performer. He roams the minuscule stage all but demanding that the crowd give him their full attention. If there’s any justice in the world, then this band will end up playing in the gigantic venues where they obviously belong.Out into the night air for a crafty cigarette and then back to the Latest bar to catch, suitably enough, the fantastically monikered Dogend Disco. Their upbeat garage punk mantras are a world apart from the posturing over-styled rock groups that litter the musical landscape these days, and that’s what makes them special. Sounding much like a English version of the Cramps, they are undeniably enjoying themselves up on that stage. After leaving the Latest Bar we decide to scoot over to the North Laine’s My Hotel to see if there is any chance of catching the elec-tronic pop weirdness of Stars And Sons before bedtime.As with most of the night we find on arrival that we’ve failed spectacularly and instead had to contend from an acoustic perfor-mance from Aaron King

We sent our intrepid reporters out onto the streets of Brighton to discover what BRIGHTON LIVE had to offer!

Page 17: November edition of BN1 Magazine

It is actually a pleasant revelation, despite that the mere mention of an acoustic singer songwriter would usually send us running and screaming in the opposite direction. His gentle and thought provoking performance provides a soothing and satisfying end to the first night of BrightonLive. The next night we discover that the booklet circulated to promote the event does actually have a proper timetable of events, so armed with this new information we start our evening at Hectors House hoping to see Camembert Electrique. They are there... but sitting around drinking instead of playing. We’re told that they would be starting late for some reason. With an hour to kill it’s decided that it’s best to check out something else in the interim.Po Na Na looks like a good option, and it proves to be. Upon rocking up we’re met with a stellar set from young upstarts Wide Boy Generation. Playing with skill and maturity way beyond their years, they are the big discovery of the week. There is no denying any compari-sons with a certain other geezer-punk trio from the late 70’s. But they take their influences, mix them with a very modern sensibil-ity and blast their adoring audience with fiery attitude-laden pop tunes. I’d be surprised if there wasn’t a nod of approval from Lord Weller of Woking for these young upstarts in the near future.

We’re buzzing over what we have just witnessed on our spirited walk back to Hectors House. It’s going to be a tough act to follow, but Camembert Electrique do a pretty good job. Annoyingly enough, we have to cut short our enjoyment of their spiky guitar funk rock to trudge back to Po Na Na. We’re getting sick of walking across Victoria Gardens by this point, but our spirits are quickly lifted by the bass heavy sound of PrjctMyhm. Although Dub step is still very much an underground thing, it’s entirely possible that this lively electronic trio could be onto a winner here. They certainly seem to attract the biggest crowd of the evening. In an event offering a plethora of punk acts they seem to have the most punk-rock attitude in town, and there’s not a guitar in sight.Decidedly less punk and thank-fully just next door, we catch Laylanas at Madame Geishas next. Their heavenly soaring brand of country music is a world away from anything we’ve heard this week. It’s almost like we’ve been spirited away to some rowdy semi-derelict bar in an American southern state.The evening eventually comes to a close, or so we think. Walking home past Hectors House we realise that, unlike the rest of the venues participating in the festival, they are still rocking inside.Further investigation reveals a fabulous turn from Q-Tone. With

a lead singer cast from the same mould as Debbie Harry and Patti Smith, this band exudes rock and roll attitude by the bucketful. But despite the energetic guitar licks and explosive drums there’s a sensitivity here that’s impossible to resist.So, the question is what did we learn from this week’s music seeking manoeuvres? Well, if you are in a band - then girls are more likely to talk to you, don’t believe everything you read on the internet, Hectors House is quite possibly the cheapest place to drink in the city centre, the sound engineer at Po Na Na is pretty good at his job and Brighton’s music scene is alive and kicking, and it’s screaming to be heard.

By Stuart Roltwww.photosbydavid.org.uk

www.bn1magazine.co.uk

Dogend Disco Wide Boy Generation

The Laylanes

Brighton Live

Page 18: November edition of BN1 Magazine

This was my first visit to a Fight Night of any kind and I was a little unsure of what to expect. Obviously I’d watched major boxing bouts on TV in the past, as well as the Saturday morning pantomime wrestling as a kid, but this was to be my first time watching live fighting, away from West St anyway. Initial impressions from the hordes of exclusively male smokers skulking around outside were that this was to be a visceral testosterone fuelled night of baying for blood. However, as I entered Hove Town Hall it was revealed that the event had gathered a much broader church of spectators for the night. Around 800 people from all walks of life had come down for the show, several with their children in tow. ZT’s Fight Night

event is organised by Hove’s very own ZT Fight school and is now one of the biggest events of its kind in the South East, with many of the schools athletes’ using it as a stepping stone to bigger things. Already some of the fighters who have won at this show have gone on to fight in the phenomenally successful Ultimate Fighting Champion-ship (UFC), including John ‘The Hitman’ Hathaway who is due to fight at the UFC 105 event in November. Oli Thompson has also fought on the ZT Fight Night card and is now ranked one of the top ten heavyweights in the UK for MMA, as well as being crowned Britain’s Strongest Man in 2006. It’s not been an easy passage for the ZT Fight Nights though. Several years ago there was a battle with certain morally-outraged residents of

Hove, who saw it as no better than human cockfighting and took every step possible to stop such an event to even go ahead. Thankfully it was soon realised that the streets of the city wouldn’t descend into chaos just because of an organised fighting event and ZT’s Fight Night has gone from strength to strength ever since.

This evening offered a full evening’s entertainment of different fighting styles, includ-ing Boxing, Hybrid Kickboxing and Mixed Martial Arts (MMA). Aside from the increased range of disciplines on the display the other big difference, between this and any other fighting contest I’d seen, is the ring which was larger and featured eight sides.There’s certainly no hiding in the corners who once you step into this ring. From the

ZT Fight Night! - Hove Town Hall - October

Page 19: November edition of BN1 Magazine

moment that the bell rings all you have to think about is how to best beat your opponent. Competitors from the ZT Fight Skool stable were taking on opponents from all over the country, all of them eager to make their own mark on the fighting scene. As the night progresses it becomes clear that there’s a lot more to these proceedings than some unadulterated blood lust.

Many young males are currently flocking to combat sports, both as fans and as athletes. Participation brings discipline and demands that you be in tremendous physical shape. To be considered an ac-complished fighter, particularly in the kick-boxing or MMA variants, you need exceptional skills in striking, take downs, submissions and seemingly end-less stamina. But most of all you need have a lot of heart. The first impression might be that you just have to hit and knock your opponent out, but it goes far beyond that. A

deeper analysis reveals there’s a great deal of technique involved.Every hold of striking blow has a number of reactionary moves, and replying to these moves there are an even greater number of reactionary moves. A really good MMA fight can quite easily be compared to virtuoso ballet performance rather than a simple exchange of blows. The outdated popular conception of this kind of event was that they were filled with uneducated gorillas that liked to get in the ring and basically kick the crap out of each other. There’s certain quarters of society who still view fighting as an ugly thing, as a something that denigrates mankind. But in reality, fighting is all around us.

Getting out of bed, first thing in the morning, is a fight. Holding down a job or relationship is a fight, struggling to be recognised and taken seriously on a planet of billions of people can be a fight. But in daily life there are few validations that you’re a real

winner. Up there in the ring there’s a precious opportunity to really show that you’ve got what it takes to be the best. Regardless of if you are a fan of boxing or MMA, or are completely inexperienced when it comes to these kind of contests, ZT Fight Night has something thrilling and strangely beguiling to offer. This was my first ZT fight Night event and I certainly hope it won’t be the last. By Stuart Rolt

www.photosbydavid.org.uk www.ztfightskool.com

Page 20: November edition of BN1 Magazine

The Katarina Harvester,Brighton MarinaIf you are looking for a trendy pub with modern decor and an upbeat atmosphere, this is not the place you want to go. The service is dour and un-enthusiastic, the salad bar is slightly tacky and the handles of the sauces could sure use a wipe, but the food is cheap, cheerful and hits the spot every time. In fact, it is for that reason that you’ll find me there on a fairly regular basis.

If you get there before 6:30pm you can take advantage of their early bird menu, and for a spicy chicken burger plus free salad bar for just £4.99 you’re guaranteed to leave with a full stomach feeling like you’ve gotten great value for money. There’s a different bar menu served downstairs, although you can order from the restaurant menu and take advantage of the balmy evenings before they get too cold to enjoy.

With their somewhat open kitchen you can keep an eye on your food as it is being prepared and trust me, once your order is placed, the chefs’ don’t waste any time getting your food on the grill and to your table, so it’s a great, reliable place for a good meal before heading over to the cinema or to one of the many pubs. A definite winner in my book and once they have injected some enthusiasm into the waiting staff you’ll probably find me there more often!

By Leigh Higgins

THE KATARINA HARVESTERBRIGHTON MARINA(NEXT TO ASDA)BN2 5WDTEL. 01273 606268

Situated on Kensington Street, slap bang in the middle of the boho North Laines, the Kensington Gardens cafe is perfectly placed for city slickers to take a load off and refresh and fortify themselves. Serving food so moderately priced, only the view of the streets below the balcony seating area can remind you that you’re in the bustling centre of an otherwise pricey European city. (If you’re lucky you could spy Superhands from Peep Show or the Jesse’s Diets guy from The Fast Show.) Food is also served promptly. In fact, in all the countless times I have frequented Kensington Garden’s cafe, I can’t remember an occasion where it ever took the friendly staff more than five minutes to deliver a tasty platter. Equally impressive is the quantity of reason-ably priced meals offered by Kensington’s. They can put virtually anything you want in baguette or a baked potato, you can build your own burger and the staff will happily mix and match any of the foods they serve and which listed on chalk boards cover three sections of the walls of the interior. For the ladies, they guy who works behind the ordering counter looks a lot like Johnny Depp. Serving a wide array of hot and cold drinks and providing ample seating inside and out, Kensington Garden’s comes highly recommended for fry ups or just a voyeuristic, freshly made latte on the seating gallery outside: Five Stars.

By Manny

Food & Drink

Kensington Gardens Cafe

Cheeky phone snap!

Page 21: November edition of BN1 Magazine

Food & Drink

Brighton Open MarketI guess I’m just a little old fashioned in that I love the smaller food markets, chatting to the stall holders who can passionately tell you exactly where the produce they are selling comes from. It’s no different from walking through the aisles of the supermarket; here you just walk through the stalls in the market where you can buy fresh fish, possibly the best bacon (an absolute steal at £1.90 a pound). There’s the cheesemonger with his funky tractor - driving cow mural, Jay the super – friendly egg man who sells free range eggs at just £0.90 for 6, or visit CH Mears fruit and veg stall which has been operated by the family since it was started in the 1920’s by Pat Mears’ grandfather.

Take a break and watch the world go by at the Cafe in the Open Market with a cuppa before moving on to pick up your organic flours, pasta’s and produce as well as specialist raw ingredients and superfoods. If you pop your washing up liquid bottles in your bag as you leave the house, Pulse also refills ecover products at a very reasonable price. You can also pick up a bargain or two from the other stalls selling plants and herbs, haberdashery, bric a brac or used tools.

All in all, a fabulous trip into the world of old where meals were planned around what was available and fresh, where people stopped to chat and service was warm and friendly. And when you get yourshopping home and taste the ocean freshness of your fish, the warm sunshine in your beef tomatoes or see the fantastic quality eggs it’ll all be worth it.

Brighton’s open market is a Brighton institution and while its appearance is deceiving with its tired and shabby facade, it is well worth exploring to find some of Brighton’s treasures.

By Leigh Higgins

THE BRIGHTON OPEN MARKETBETWEEN LONDON AND DITCHLING ROADSCLOSED SUNDAY AND MONDAY AFTERNOONS

www.bn1magazine.co.uk

McEwan’s ChampionAutumn is now firmly upon us….the season of mellow fruitfulness. As the nights draw in and the daytime recedes into the long winter months, a spectre of gloom hangs heavy like Cicero’s Damocles. “Laughter is the sun that drives winter from the human face” suggested Victor Hugo, failing that you could always try a generous dose of McEwan’s Champion Ale. Now part of the Scottish and Newcastle division of Heineken, McEwan’s are most famous for their mediocre yet enduring ‘export’ brand. Unlike the ‘export’ this 7.3% (abv) offering is a rich Christmas pudding of a beer guaranteed to warm even the frostiest of cockles. Its deep ruby hue is one you would expect from a strong winter ale. With bundles of preserved fruit flavours and hints of toffee and chocolate, some may find the finish a little on the sweet side. Personally I like the balance between the burnt caramel notes and the deep boozy punch. If, like me, you find winter to be a joyless, crushing bleakness, an all-consuming wretch of bitter interminable misery, punctuated by spiteful melancholy, then take solace in this warming winter wonderland of a beer.

Available at Tesco £1.67 for 500ml bottle..

The Booze Hound !

Page 22: November edition of BN1 Magazine

Your name, Ojos de Brujo translates into English as Eyes of the Wizard. Why did you choose this name and where did it come from ?

It comes from when we started as a couple of friends looking for names for the band with various suggestions. The eyes are seen as the window to the soul and wizard is a flamenco

compliment so we eventually settled on that.

Your music has been described as a blend of nu-flamenco and hip-hop. How would you

Ojos de Brujo

Catalonian force of nature Ojos de Brujo bring their ever popular live act to Brighton in November playing at the Dome on Sunday 29th November for their first UK shows since 2007. The winners of the BBC3 World Music awards in 2004 mix a heady blend of flamenco, raga, hip-hop and rumba with recent star turns from Nitin Sawhney and Asian Dub Foundation. The tour will be preview-ing tracks from brand new album Acoana. Andy Hollis from BN1 caught up with the delightful DJ Panko from Ojos de Brujo to find out more…..

Page 23: November edition of BN1 Magazine

Interview: Ojos de Brujo

describe your music and what influences do you have ?

We don’t just play flamenco and hip-hop, we try and open up music we know. It ranges from the electronica of British bands through to North African beats, Indian beats and Latin music. Our influences are worldwide. Perhaps we are evolving fla-menco but there is much more to it than that.

Historically it’s been difficult to translate foreign language music to a UK market – what has your reception in the UK been like ?

We were very surprised the first time we played here at the amazing level of support. BBC 3 gave us their award for best World Band which naturally helped. The UK fans have a very open attitude to investigating music and it’s a way for them to investigate flamenco. It’s been the same in Holland and Sweden. With the ERASMUS programmes in place it has become quite usual for cultures to mix and we’ve always found the UK fans very accepting.

And how about your time in Brighton ?

I would definitely live in Brighton if I lived in England. It’s nowhere near as hectic and stressful as London, plus we seem to be very popular in Brighton.

You split from your record company following your debut album and formed your own label to release the highly successful Bari – why did you feel the need to do that ?

It was just a way of doing things – we wanted to be able to do things ourselves without the demands of others placed on us. It was hard work but we had great feedback and toured Bari across the world.

How have the last two albums (Techari and Acoana) differed – how do you feel as a band you have progressed ?

Techari and Acoana are still on our label but we have distribution by Warner now. In Techari you can hear we are more solid as a band, it’s a much more complete and solid album. The newest album, Acoana is quieter with less Latina style mothering from our singer !

As a band you look to address social issues – what are the main problems you perceive socially today ?

Yes, we are asked to play at demonstrations quite a lot. We are particularly concerned with the imbalance across the world’s economy and the lack of possibility for the less fortunate and their right to speak. We just feel life should be a happy and positive experience. We are political but we want to promote a positive message rather than a political one. If you can change the soul for one moment then you can find happiness.

Finally then, how do you think Rafa Benitez is performing at Liverpool ?

I was born in Barcelona so my main concern sits with the performance of Barca. I think Pep Guardiola is very good for the team as he was born here and has lived and played in the history of the team. Of course I was surprised by our recent loss to Rubin, but there’s no worries. I’m confident in Pep !

By Andy Hollis

Catch Ojos de Brujo at the Brighton Dome on Suday 29th November

www.brightondome.org/events/Ojos-de-Brujo

www.bn1magazine.co.uk

Page 24: November edition of BN1 Magazine

in PicturesOctober

Page 25: November edition of BN1 Magazine
Page 26: November edition of BN1 Magazine

SCRIBBLENAUTS

It’s truly wonderful that we are living in an age where technology is constricted purely by human creativity, and here is a game that takes that notion to the extreme. It’s hard to describe exactly which genre the new Nintendo DS game ScribbleNauts fits into best. After slamming the game into the dusty old handheld, the player is presented with a boy standing in a grassy forest and no instructions whatsoever; aside from the rather ambiguous START text at the bottom of the screen. Skipping forwards through five minutes of ex-perimentation and tutorial, the player is soon tasked with removing a ball from a tree. The unusual thing about this game however, is that the player can do almost anything in order to retrieve the ball, using a system in which the player can conjure any item or object onto the screen by simply writing it. You can write ‘ladder’ and then climb the ladder to get the ball. You can write ‘helicopter’, ‘’lasso’ or even ‘sniper rifle’ to retrieve the ball, the options limited only by the imagination of the player. Of course the puzzles increase in complexity as the game progresses, and there are some words that are off-limits, namely proper nouns, drugs and rude words. No ‘Paris Hilton’ ‘cocaine’ and ‘dildo’ then. The game is spectacular in its range of possibilities and the sadistic joy of lowering a bureaucrat into a pool of sharks or confront-ing an atheist with God never fails to bring a smile to the player’s face. The scope of the toolset is truly overwhelming, though the gameplay and control mechanic are somewhat flawed, with repetition and awkward character movement eventually occurring so frequently that the game becomes frustrating after long periods of play. Nevertheless, ScribbleNauts is a fantastic game to play whilst on the train or bus in short bursts and only those with no imagination will fail to see the fun side of the game. This is probably the best game on the DS this year, and should be on any DS-owners Christmas list come December.

GOOGLE CHROMEWith only 3% or so of the market share and less than a year since its release, it’s unlikely you will have heard of Google Chrome. Like Opera and Firefox, Chrome is a free to download program that is aiming to chip into some of the monopoly that Microsoft’s Internet Explorer currently has on the world’s internet browsers. The open-source project recently released the 3.0.195.21 update, which has improved the stability of the software and has also granted users more customisation, including the option to download new themes. Chrome is undoubtedly faster than Firefox, Internet Explorer and Safari, plug-ins work smoothly and Javascript performance is fantastic. Sometimes certain downloads and applications are not compatible with the browser, which can be frustrating, so it’s always best to have a back-up browser just in case. The interface is minimal, meaning users can view their website of choice with very little GUI in the way. Bookmarks can be displayed in a row along the top, and the address bar is doubled up as a Google search bar. Users can also search Google in a new tab by right-clicking on any text on a webpage and the tab mechanic is designed so that malware and other harmful sites cannot affect other open tabs. The new update’s features are likely only noticeable to existing Chrome users, and the mighty Opera is still probably the best overall web browser available, though the 66% of internet users that are still stuck using Internet Explorer should definitely consider downloading Google’s latest alternative.

Entertainment

Page 27: November edition of BN1 Magazine

PICJOKE.COM There have been Photoshop-mimicking websites around for a while now, and although many are surprisingly powerful and provide a decent amount of tools with which to modify your pictures, all of them require some skill on the user’s behalf. Enter picjokes.com, a site where you need nothing more than your curiosity and a working index finger in order to create an effect on your images. The process couldn’t be easier, just choose the effect you want then submit the photo that you want to use it on and within ten seconds you have the finished modified image back. Of course, the site is limited in the amount of effects it offers, and some of them are fairly pathetic. As Picjoke uploads a new effect every day, there is reason to go back, though if you are handy with a Photoshop wand then it’s probably best to keep well clear. Otherwise, for those with a busy schedule or with no editing prowess at all, Picjoke is great for adding a quick effect to your photos or for fooling around with the different filters: it’s just unfortunate that most of them are rather silly.

By Joel Windels

www.bn1magazine.co.uk

Page 28: November edition of BN1 Magazine

Anyone familiar with the Brightonhip-hop scene will know that it harbours a diverse array of characters, many of whom are ‘promiscuous’ in the musical sense of the word. The beauty of hip-hop is that it doesn’t need to involve a lot of equipment – Two turntables and mic and you’re ready to get creative, so the ease of interaction between artists opens the gateway to a whole plethora of collabora-tions. Occasionally MC’s come together and there’s a real connection between them, and this is how Special School came to be.

To help you understand where these gentlemen are coming from, we should tell you a bit about the members of the crew: First up is Elemental (www.myspace.com/mcelemental), a prolific MC who has worked with countless artists and has been doing live shows for longer than most. Known better to some as Professor Elemental, his alter-ego has made appearances at various burlesque cabaret shows around the country, and you may already be familiar with the YouTube favourite ‘Cup Of Brown Joy’ – If you haven’t seen it yet, type it into YouTube and prepare to be enlightened. In his own words, “I am keen on songs that involve animals, machines or tea.”

Next up is Jon Clark (www.myspace.com/jonsept), Elemental’s partner in crime on the microphone device. Having spent his childhood growing up in the far-flung nether regions of the USA, Brazil and Somerset, England, you will understand that Mr Clark articulates with an accent that is not your average twang! Combined with his dulcet vocal tones and an incredibly inventive mind, the man’s lyrics simply need to be heard to be fully appreciated.

Backing them up on DJ duties is Nick Maxwell (www.myspace.com/nickmaxwell), an accomplished DJ with over 15 years experience behind the turntables. Having cut his teeth as a jungle DJ in the early nineties, Nick Maxwell’s love of hip-hop eventually took over and this has been his primary focus for the last decade or so, and his ‘Adventures In Hip-Hop’ series of mixtapes has won him considerable plaudits over the years

Page 29: November edition of BN1 Magazine

So how did they all come together? Well, Elemental met Nick Maxwell soon after the turn of the century and they instantly struck up a rapport through their love of good hip-hop, and it wasn’t long before they started doing live shows together. They then got together with acclaimed hip-hop producer Tom Caruana (www.myspace.com/tomcaruana), who was already making his mark through his production talents, and together they formed a crew called The Menagerie, which encompassed other accomplished home-grown MC’s such as Dr Syntax, Teej, Longusto and Koaste. The boys enjoyed a few good years recording and performing as The Menagerie, but after releasing one album (‘Wild Kingdom’ in 2005) the additional members eventu-ally ended up moving in different directions. It was about this time that Elemental and Jon Clark decided to put their burgeoning relationship to good use, and Special School was born.

So what do they do now? Well since 2005, Elemental, Jon Clark and Nick Maxwell have been playing intermittently at various events and basically honing their live performance. Certainly not your average UK hip-hop act, their shows feature tracks on topics such as odd jobs, graveyards, pet hates, and of course tea, and more often than not will include some impressive costume changes and, if you’re lucky, the odd bit of pyromania. Their formula is pretty simple – Straight-up feel-good hip-hop for people who enjoy decent music, and their aim is merely for their audience to come away feeling that they’ve been entertained. Their album is in the process of being recorded and will be dropping at some point in the relatively near future, but in the meantime, look out for one of Special School’s very special live shows.

Page 30: November edition of BN1 Magazine

Have faith in Slade!

It’s a well known and undisputable fact that football fans are fickle. This applies to all, from the most fair weather, armchair Premiership fan to the dedicated supporter who follows their team home and away.The Seagulls have not had the best of starts to the season, with seven defeats in the first fourteen league matches and exits from two cup competitions at the first time of asking. As you may have guessed by now, I’m writing here about Russell Slade, Brighton and Hove Albion Manager. If you’re more interested in Noddy Holder and chums, you’d be better off elsewhere! Many fans are becoming restless with the team once again close to the wrong end of the table and plenty of them are already calling for Slade’s head.

Slade took the helm in March with Albion languishing in a relegation spot. After a shaky start, however, he managed to guide them to safety against all

the odds. Over the summer he completely dismantled the team, releasing over a dozen players and signing a similar number of new faces. We all knew it would take time for the team to gel, but after a one point haul from the first five games, some had already had enough. Football is, after all, a results business but for those of us mad enough to follow the team to such far flung places as Carlisle, the gradual improvement in performances is apparent and the points tally is slowly but surely starting to rise.

Brighton have a tough run of matches to face in November, with Southampton & Norwich away and Leeds & Charlton at home, as well as the first round of the FA Cup.

Since the sale of the Goldstone, the Club’s profile has often been low, but the future looks bright. Though well known amongst fans, a number of my Chelsea and Arsenal “supporting” friends seem oblivious to the changes taking place. Tony Bloom, the Albion’s new chairman, has paid the £90-odd million required for

the new Community Stadium out of his own pocket and this City has the catchment area needed to build a decent football club.

So back to Slade. Football is clearly a results business and the fans frustrations are quite understandable, but changing managers every six months is not the answer. Russ is the thinking man’s manager; listen to his post match interviews and he doesn’t make excuses, he just makes it clear that the team “have to work harder” until they get it right. I write this despite having just returned home from the Albion’s 2-0 defeat at home to Oldham Athletic; the first time this season the team have been roundly booed off (not by me I hasten to add, I fail to see how this will encourage them to do better). They looked the better team for large tracts of the match, though lacked killer instinct; surely time to give a manager a season to show what he can do as he builds his own team. We won’t get relegated this season, of that I’m convinced, let’s see what the shiny-headed one can do in the long run.

It may have been a slow start to the season but get down to Withdean and get behind Russell and the team. Oh, and don’t judge our performances by what you’ve seen on Match of the Day. We’re not there... yet.

By Notters

BRIGHTON & HOVE ALBION

Russell Slade aloft by crowd

Page 31: November edition of BN1 Magazine

MYBus is essentially designed to take the much needed services that the Youth Centre provides out to the young people it serves at times and places that suits them, encouraging ownership and control over the services they most need. Thanks to a 3 year grant of £155,000 from the Big Lottery Young People’s Fund 2 and support from PARC (Play Area in Rottingdean Com-mittee) and Brighton & Hove City Council It’s in action 6 days a week. The lottery funding

is providing young people with new opportunities to have meaningful involvement in the development, design and review of services aimed at them and a unique feature of the project is that it is entirely youth led. As an example young people recruited the staff to run the project and helped design elements of the current delivery programme outlined below;Monday evening – Lockwood

Park Woodingdean, supporting the Soccerena sessions, a 3 a side football tournament on an all-weather surface.Tuesday & Wednesday evening – Bexhill Road Park, offer-ing a place for young people in the area to hang out and get involvedThursday – Longhill School Rottingdean - supporting group work and life skills opportuni-ties.Friday evening - working in partnership with the Crew Club

to deliver a Mobile Music and Information Project – then onto Saltdean for the late shift 9.30 to 12, offering advice and support to kids in the local area. Saturday evening -working in partnership with the Crew Club to deliver a Mobile Music and Information ProjectBusy week!!!Gary estimates that they have anywhere between 30-60 young people visiting the bus

at any one evening, with many people coming back to see them a couple of times a week. Obviously this is only possible with the help and support of the MYBus team Youth Workers Emily Packham and Donna Wilson and all the young people involved including Jake Cressey, Luke McNeil, Amy Pullen and Jenna Gray.One of the major goals of the lottery funding is to advance the young people involved in the local area, to this effect the team have been tasked with discover-

ing 12 “youth champions” who will then lead on some aspects of service delivery. Overall MYBus aims to

ensure there are improved outcomes for young people,

more will be involved and as a result organisa-tions will have a better understanding of the needs of young

people. For more information on the

MYBus project, please contact Gary Rolf at [email protected], for more information on the Youth Centre, please contact Helen Baxter on 01273 600606.To have your charity included in this section, please contact Chris at BN1 magazine, [email protected]

By Chris Taylor

MYBusAs BN1 Magazine is community focussed, we’ve decided to launch a new charity column, focusing on those selfless people around Brighton that give up their time to help others. For our first article, I met up with Gary Rolf, who works for Youth Charity ‘Woodingdean Youth Centre’, to discuss their Mobile Youth Bus project, ‘MYBus’, and discover more about the project.

Youth Centre on wheels!

www.bn1magazine.co.uk

Brighton & Hove Albion

Page 32: November edition of BN1 Magazine

Arts and Culture

On first entrance, an air of the liminal hangs over "Chameleon", Fabrica's current exhibition. From the darkened vaults of the former church descend portraits of slumbering sitters. They are neither lugubri-ous nor jocund, not quotidian and certainly not exceptional. Dead men, it seems, tell no tales, and neither do these blank, fallow faces. On the visitor's approach, the solemn atmosphere is broken, and in an ingenious coalition of science, technology and art, the somnolent figures awake. What follows is an experience that invites us to meditate broadly on the functions of portraiture. Though consisting of but a few screens, and entirely contained within the one space, here is an exhibition where themes of anthropology, psychology, and

artificial and emotional intel-ligence are writ large. Tina Gonsalves and her team have created a series of videos that respond to their viewers. Software reads the emotions of the observer and answers in kind. Throughout the day, the moods of the portraits "adapt to the range of visitors' emotional expressions, affecting the tone and emotional ecology of the gallery space." Gonsalves is artist in residence at the Wellcome Department of Neuroimaging London, and in numerous other high profile institutions, who leads a team attempting to push the bound-aries of what the artist can achieve. Her accomplishment here is undeniable. We are attuned to faces with an innate and piercing astuteness, and

artists have always exploited our compulsion to interpret tiny physical movements as wide ranging and discrete emotional states. The raised eyebrow, the curled lip or the flared nostril; all are giveaways to the mental state beneath. We need only remember the amount of ink spilt over a certain inscrutable smile throughout the years to expose our fallibility in this area: despite our sophistication, our intuition can still fail us. In a wonderful inversion of the traditional portraiture experience, we are here not to interpret that which we see before us, but to be interpreted by it. Mirrored and exagger-ated by our digital audience, we are asked to question what, in our own faces, provokes such reactions. It is a complicated interaction in which we are shown a part of ourselves we may ordinarily overlook; for all the time we invest in our outward appearance, the subtle and unconscious movement of the face is our most powerful tool of communication. Fascinating stuff. By John Heavens

Across: 1 Timid, 4 Grasp, 7 Ear, 8 Linen, 9 Empty, 10 Sea, 11 Toad, 12 Echo, 17 Pea, 18 House, 19 Reign, 20 Arc, 21 Wreck, 22 Hence. Down: 1 Talent, 2 Manufacture, 3 Dense, 4 Great, 5 Application, 6 Pays, 13 Orange, 14 Speak, 15 March, 16 Show.

28

Page 33: November edition of BN1 Magazine

SUNDAY 1ST

Belushi’s Open Mic Session 8.30-midnight £freeBelushi’s below Latin ses-sions Salsa & Samba ladies free b4 11The Black Lion Dubrockerslive Dub, Reggae, Ska + Funk night 6pm £free happy hour till 9The Brunswick Radio City Theatre 2pm £FreeThe Brunswick Ruthie Culver Live Music 8pm £7Coalition Frequency house night 11-4am £10Concorde2 Daniel Johnston+ Laura Marling one of the most popular and loved folk rock musi-cians of our time 8-11pm £17.50 + bf in advThe Druids The Downsound Sessions downtempo beats, bro-ken down grooves, soul, laid back latin, trip hop. 9pm £freeDuke of Beaufort Beaufort Blues Club 2-7pm £freeFish Bowl Recovery rare reggae and soul 9-2am freeHoney Club Spectrum 10.30pm-2.30am £2 b4 mid-night / £3 after with a Free shot on entryKomedia Bent Double- comedy 7.30pm, £20(meal-deal)/£10/£8 concKomedia Krater Comedy Club 8pm, £20 (meal-deal), £10 / £6 NUSKomedia Desperate for Love- poetry 8.30pm £3.50The latest Music Bar State of Undress Live music 8pm £6/5The latest Music Bar Jia + Dani Blue + Alex Gigante Live music 8pm £4/3Pitcher & Piano Unfunkinbe-lievable: All pints £1.85, Vodka and Mixer £2, Selected cocktails 2-4-1 Prince Albert The Shaky Hands + Flash Bang Band 7.30pm £7/6advRikiTiks Rarekind Records Sunday Session Wyndham with

funk & soul rarities from past & present 10-2amThomas Kemp Open mic 8pm £freeWhite Rabbit Jazz Sundays 3pm startXuma Jazz 8-10pm

MONDAY 2ND

Ancient Mariner Quiz night 8pm £1Belushi’s Quiz night 8.30-11pm £freeBelushi’s below Industry Night party tunes 9-2am £freeThe Black Lion Happy Mondays Live music 6pm £free happy hour all nightThe Brunswick Acting Classes Theatre 10.30am & 7.30pm £7Coalition Trash Mondays Stu-dent night 10.30-3.30am £free b411Concorde2 Reverend & The Makersin 2nd album tour + Yves Klein Blue + Backhanded Compli-ments 7.30pm £12 + bf in advDuke of Beaufort free pool 8pmEasy Bar Social Poker 8pm £5 all inFountain Head Quiz with Char-lotte questions, singing rounds + playdough! 8pm £1Funky Buddah Mashed up 11-3am £2/3 (£free b4 12)

Honey Club ‘DETENTION’ -£FREE to everyone before midnight / £2 UBSU / £3 Others after.10.30pm-2.30amHope The H’Open Mic 8.30pm £freeJuggler AKL open mic 8-1am £freeKomedia Roachford- soul singer 7.30pm £15Komedia The Unthanks- folk 8.30pm £12.50Kulture U Dirty Stop Out buy one drink get two drinks free all night 7-3am £3The latest Music Bar Break-through with Rough Trade Djs + live acts Doors 8pm Starts 8pm £3/£2 NUSLife Stampede Student night 10.30-2.30am NUS £free/£2The Marlborough Free Pool lunch-closePitcher & Piano Unfunkinbe-

lievable: All pints £1.85, Vodka and Mixer £2, Selected cocktails 2-4-1 Prince Albert The Drones + Salter Cane + The Misbegotten 8pmSidewinder Poker Night £5 all inThomas Kemp Superbang Quiz/games night 9pm £freeVolks BIG T presents Strictly Reggae Dancehall Bashment 10-Late £5/£4 cheap drinksXuma Cheese and Wine 8-cl + Poker 8pm (poker starts)

TUESDAY 3RD

Audio New Slang alt/indie/electro night 10pm-2am £3Belushi’s below Elements DnB 9-2am £freeThe Brunswick Open Mic Live Music 8pm £FreeThe Brunswick Language Classes - Beginner Other 7pm 5The Brunswick Singer/Song-writer Classes Other 7pm 7.5Coalition Salsabrighton dance classes 8pm £6/£4 for classesCoalition Latin Fever (Club Night) club night 10pm til 3am £3/£2 B4 12Cornerstone Son Of Movie Bar Halloween-ish Special Film makers networking night 8pm £freeDuke of Beaufort curry night curry+pint £5Duke of Norfolk Open mic night Blue’s mix, Country, Modern + Acoustic 9pm £freeEasy Bar Ink Fish Tuesdays Request night 8pm £freeFiddlers Quizness Time 8pm £1Fountain Head open mic Musi-cians, Poets, Magicians, Comedi-ans + storytellers 9-11pm £freeFunky Buddah Wireless pop, dance + commercial RnB 10.30-3.30am £3The Globe Basement Cinema Future Is Unwritten (Joe Strummer) + Heima (Sigur Ros) 8-late £freeHoney Club Indie Rock £1/2Hope Slip Jam:B hip hop jam with open mics/decks 8.30-11.30 £freeJam Kong Presents live upcom-ing bands 8-10.30 £4/2Juggler Are you BIMM? live bands £free (happy hour 4 BIMM students)

Listings:

Page 34: November edition of BN1 Magazine

Komedia Dogan Mehmet- gypsy-punk sounds £7.30 £7 adv/£8The latest Music Bar The Space 25 anniversary fi lm night Doors 7.30 starts 8.00 £6/£4Life The Vice Social Student night 10.30-2.30am NUS £free/£2The Marlborough Bring The Noise BYOMP3 8-closePitcher & Piano Cocktail Party: 2-4-1 on all cocktails, all night Prince Albert Bohemian Mods+Small Gods+The Parody 8pmRikiTiks Swafe DJs Hip-hop, reg-gae, funk & soul 11-3amSidewinder Bangers and Mashup 100+ combinations of Sausage, Mash and Gravies £5 till 9.30Thomas Kemp Nuts Poker League National tournament 7.30pm £freeVolks Salsa lessons 8.30-10.30pm + party afterwards

WEDNESDAY 4TH Audio Antipop consortium live hip hop early show 7pm £9.50Audio Supercharged Breaks night 10.30-2.20am £5/3Belushi’s below Strapped Stu-dent Night 10-2am £free NUSThe Black Lion Fresh Acous-tics live music 8.30-12.30am £freeThe Brunswick Language Classes - Intermediate Other 7pm 5The Brunswick The Noise Next Door Comedy 8pm £8/£6Coalition Cha Mon indie/ party hits 10.30-3am £2/3/4Concorde2 Yellowman Legend-ary dancehall reggae master 8pm £15 + bf in advDuke of Norfolk Quiz night 9pm £1Fish Bowl Fisherman’s chronicles Open mic / acoustic Jam 8-12 £freeThe Globe Open Mac 9-1am £freeHectors House Stay Sick! The Painted Smiles, Trippin Violet, DKH + Stay Sick! DJ’s 7pm £3Hope Amity and Hoodlums Live music 8-12pm £4/3

Jam Ghost Ryde hip-hop night 10-2am £2Juggler Bakk Lamp Fall’ 5 Piece Traditional West African Band 8pm £freeKomedia 3oh!3- pop/rap/elec-tronic 8pm £10 advKomedia Scott Matthews 8.30pm £12.50 advKulture Wii Wednesdays Stu-dent Night 7-1am £freeThe latest Music Bar Headwa-ter Live music 8pm £5/4Life Lets Kill Disco indie, electro, dnb, breaks 10.30-2.30am NUS £free/£1The Marlborough Poker night Texas Hold’em Tournament 8-closeOcean Rooms Blag Alternative Student Party 11-3am £freePitcher & Piano Cocktail Party: 2-4-1 on all cocktails, all night RikiTiks To the Floor Indie, roc, electro 10-2amSidewinder Steak+quiz night steak £7, Quiz £1Volks nicky blackmarket plus residents DnB/Dubstep 11-3am £free/£1Western Front Upfront live music 8-12pm £freeXuma Quiz 8.30-10.30

THURSDAY 5TH Audio Shameless Pop night 11pm-2.30am £2Belushi’s Karaoke 9-2am £freeBelushi’s below Party on the Ceiling Bands + DJ 9.30-2am £2The Black Lion Come as You Are Mulholland + Bird drums and guitar showcase 8.30 £freeThe Brunswick Javier Moreno Live Music 8pm £6Coalition Secret Discotheque shamefully unfashionable music 11-3 £tbcDuke of Norfolk Live music night 9-11pm £freeEasy Bar Free Fall DnB + Dub step from DJ Threts + friends 9-1am £freeFiddlers Fiddle Sticks live music 9pm £freeFish Bowl Residents Associa-tion Dj’s playing eclectic mix of hip hop, funk + more 10-3am £freeFunky Buddah Bang Bang

Request night 9-3.30 £freeThe Globe Live Music 8-11pm £freeThe Hamptons Accoustic ses-sions Live local acts 9.30pm £freeHoney Club Fusion-3 rooms of dance music £1 before 11.30pm/NUS / £3 others after 11.30pm with a free shot! Drinks from £1 all night! 11pm-3am. The Hub Open Mic 8.30pmJam Fish Fry 50’s US Rhythm & Blues/ original Jamaican Ska + more 10-2am £3Juggler Are you BIMM? live bands £free (happy hour 4 BIMM students)Kulture Naughty Thursdays Student night 7-3am £freeThe latest Music Bar Itchy Fingers? Live music 8pm £6Life Club NME 10.30-3am £2/1The Marlborough Open Mic Marly Accoustic Jam night 8-closePitcher & Piano Unfunkinbe-lievable: All pints £1.85, Vodka and Mixer £2, Selected cocktails 2-4-1 Prince Albert The Mekano Set+ This Mono Galaxy + Piglust 8pmProvidence The Sussex Jazz Orchestra Acoustic Night 8pm £freeRikiTiks Corrupt DJ duo 2 Bit Thugs 10-2amThe Victory Open Mic Night 8pm £freeVolks Southern Invasion DnB & Dubstep 10-3am £4/3 Ladies free b4 11Western Front Blingual Lan-guage Exchange Party 8-late £freeWhite Rabbit Local Live Bonfi re Night Special 8pm StartXuma Swishing 7-9pm

FRIDAY 6TH Audio Warehouse A1Bassline + Hot Pink Delorean 11-4am £5/8Belushi’s Coyote Ugly dance competition 9-2am £freeBelushi’s below Skool Disco 70’s,80’s,90’s rock, pop & disco 10-2am £2/free NUSThe Black Lion Attic Monkeys Motown, 60s, Rare 70s Funk, 80s Hip Hop 8.30pm £freeThe Brunswick The Lost High-

Page 35: November edition of BN1 Magazine

way Live Music 8pm £5/£4Coalition Tentilicious dub/ reg-gae/ psy trance music,sculpture, puppet workshops, cake decorating, clothes swap shop 10-5am £7/6Concorde2 Dave Pearce Eu-phoric uplifting trance + Adam White + Tristan D 11pm £10 + bf in advThe Druids Hot Pepper Sauce Funk and Soul, reggae and dance DJ 10-3am £freeDuke of Beaufort Blow out live DJs 11-1am £freeDuke of Norfolk Live guest Djs 9-2am £freeFish Bowl BlackBeltJonez funk, hip-hop and general mayhem from DJ behind burnt toast (Redio Reverb) 9-3am £freeFortune of War Dj Andy Satel-lite Gypsy Beats/Turkish Breaks/Cumbia/Viet Rock!!... 9.30-1.30 £freeThe Globe All time top 100 Guest DJs playing all time top 1000 9-2am £freeGrand Central DJ Ivan 8-12pmThe Hamptons Funkin Friday Jazzy D and guests spin Jazz, funk, Brazilian beats + more 9pm £free Honey Club 11-16 Year Olds Club night 7pm-10pm Advance tickets only!!! £6 Honey Club HARDSOUTH Presents…Karim & Lucy Fur + Guests £8Adv/£10 Door/ £5 Students 11pm until 5amHope Jacquemo Ska/funk night 9pm-late £5Hope Direct and Gi3mo Hip hop funk djs downstairs 9-late £freeJam Broke resident djs playing glitch-hop, dubstep, jungle, breaks + dnb 11-3am £freeKomedia Krater Comedy Club- 7.30pm, £22.50(meal-deal)/£12.50/£10 conc.Komedia Brighton Jazz Club 8pm £12/10/8 NUSKomedia Laid Back & Late Piano Bar with Glen Richard-son 11pm £3Kulture Fresh Fridays 7-3am £freeThe latest Music Bar Decorum candlelit evening of live inti-mate performances. Delicate modern folk + soulful rythum melodies. 7.15-10pm £6

The latest Music Bar Ska Bar Ska night 8pm £3Life Daft Life Alt.dance, electro and indie-leaning house 11-3am £4/5The Marlborough Q&A (Queer & Alternative) Indie, electro, soul, punk, and old school 5-closeThe Marlborough (Theatre upstairs) Lillith’s Labyrinth Alternative Cabaret night 8pmOcean Rooms Freebass fridays 11-5am £freeOpen House Micheal Chap-man Brighton folk & BluesPitcher & Piano DJ Daniel De Silver mixing house and chart remixes till 2am, free entry Prince Albert Mudlow + The Der-ellas + Pinky Doodle Poodle 8pmProvidence Stash the Silver + Damaged + Mondo Kong Rock Night 8pm £1RikiTiks Askew Recordings soul, funk and eclectic 11-3amSidewinder Shades of Blue Funk V Jazz special 8-late £freeThomas Kemp DJ night 8-1am £freeVolks BaRBaRiK: Kutz, Inasound & Sadam, Clandestine, Voytek, Blake dubstep, naughty dancers and fab vibes 11-5am £5/6 (pro-ceeds going to PRIDE)Western Front Bar Breaks Beats DJs playing Hip-Hop, Funk, Electro House & Breaks 9-2am £free

SATURDAY 7TH Ancient Mariner Hat Party 7pmAudio SOL Blogger’s Delight Renaissance Man/Casper C/NikNikNik 11-4am £freeBelushi’s Credit Crunch Satur-days live acoustic duo 9-2am £freeBelushi’s below Good Times over 25’s party 9.30-2am £5The Black Lion Burnt Toast with Radio Reverb soul,funk, breaks + hip hop 8.30pm £freeThe Brunswick Salsa Night Other 8pm/9pm £10/£8Coalition James Lavelle 1 half of unkle returns to Brighton 11-4amCoalition Blow (afterparty) house/ electro/ techno £7/5/4 3am-7am

Concorde2 Ram Records Tour: Andy C + MC GQ, Sub Focus , Lomax, XamplE 11pm £11.50 + bf in advThe Druids The Downsound Sessions downtempo beats, bro-ken down grooves, soul, laid back latin, trip hop. 9pm £freeDuke of Beaufort SatNight-IsGonnaB-Alwite back beat ska night 8pm £freeDuke of Norfolk Soul Train soul, funk + grooves 9-2am £freeFish Bowl Freestyle Sessions Broken beats, nu-jazz, soul, funk & reggae 9-3am £freeFortune of War Throw Some Shapes Present... Interpretations Nu Jazz, Breaks, Soul And Beats 9.30-1.30 £freeFunky Buddah Buddah Soul Mike Panteli with R&B, House + reminiscent party tunes 11-3am £10Funky Buddah Upside Down Afterparty 3-7amThe Globe Basement disco party groove based dance music 9-2am £freeGrand Central Brighton Jam live music The Hamptons Electric atmospheres Progressive house, electric house, lounge, break beat 9 till late £free

HOBGOBLIN RATS UNION presents JETT BLACK+TRASHTOWN THRILLERS SHOWCASE, 8pm-late FREEHoney Club SEVENSINS Presents…Steve Mac 11pm till 4.30am £10Hope Croc Servo Live music 8-2am £4/3Jam The Stash Rob the Rich, Amity, The Wellingtons 8.30-12pm £4/3

Komedia Krater Comedy Club 7pm & 10.30pm, £26.50(meal-deal, 7pm only)/£16.50Komedia Comedy Club 4Kids 2pm £8/6Komedia Steve Ellis- soul vocalist 8pm £12.50Komedia Vive La Fip! 11pm £6/5Kulture Freak!! 7-3am £free b4 11The latest Music Bar The Music of Hedwig and the Angry Inch Story of an ignored rock singer with live

Page 36: November edition of BN1 Magazine

music and supporting cast Doors 8pm Show 9pm £6.50Life HOLD UP! Indie night 11-4am £5The Marlborough Girls Rock On 8-clsoeThe Marlborough (Theatre upstairs) Club Wotever Queer Girls Comedy and Clever Words! 7pmOcean Rooms BnW Produc-tions: Breakin Bear, Morning Or-chestra, Alex Gigante + more 12hrs of live music 8.30pm-8.30am £5/4Ocean Rooms presents: Danny Rampling 11-5am £6/8/10Open House Kevin Barber American Blues Pitcher & Piano The Ultimate Party, always buzzing with music for all, Reserve areas of the bar free of charge, until 2am, free entry. Prince Albert Frank Sidebottom + The Impossible 4 8pmPrince Albert In The Main Bar Dolly Dagger D.Js 8pmProvidence Your Army + Pocket Drummers + Fire Times Rock Night 8pm £1RikiTiks Wolf Music disco past and present 11-3amSidewinder Dj Barry Dust Latin, soul, funk, jazz & reggae Thomas Kemp Party time Djs and live bands 8-1am £freeThe Victory Fernando Poo Country, Classic Pop, Folk, Techno & More 9pm £freeVolks Psychedelicious: Firework Frenzy! Breaks & Psy-trance 11-5am £6/£8Western Front Dj’s playing House, Electro, Funk and Breaks 9-2am £freeWhite Rabbit The Rabbit Rabbit Rabbit Djs 8pm Start

SUNDAY 8TH

Audio Communion live indie bands/DJs 7-2amBelushi’s Open Mic Session 8.30-midnight £freeBelushi’s below Latin ses-sions Salsa & Samba ladies free b4 11The Black Lion Dubrockerslive Dub, Reggae, Ska + Funk night 6pm £free happy hour till 9The Brunswick Ukulele Sun-

days Live Music 3pm £FreeThe Brunswick Lea DeLaria Live Music 8pm 10Coalition Frequency house night 11-4am £10Concorde2 Just Jack celebrat-ing release of his new album All Night Cinema + support 7.30pm £12.50 + bf in advThe Druids Nostalgiadelia Inter-national funk and otherworldly soul 10-3am £freeDuke of Beaufort Beaufort Blues Club 2-7pm £freeFiddlers Sham-Rock open night legendary, brilliant, Guinness-sod-den 9pm £freeFish Bowl Recovery rare reggae and soul 9-2am freeThe Hamptons Retro Sunday Roasts and old skool tunes ending the week in style! Honey Club Spectrum 10.30pm-2.30am £2 b4 mid-night / £3 after with a Free shot on entryHope Spikey Promotions acous-tic sessions 4-6pm £freeKomedia Krater Comedy Club 8pm, £20(meal-deal)/£10/£6 conc.Komedia Baby Loves Disco 2pm £8Komedia Count Arthur Strong’s Radio Show 7.30pm £freeKomedia Short Fuse- short stories and literature 8pm £6/5The Marlborough Big Gay Quiz 6-closePitcher & Piano Unfunkin-believable: All pints £1.85, Vodka and Mixer £2, Selected cocktails 2-4-1 Prince Albert Blackstorm + Here There Be Monsters + Ateriosus 7pmRikiTiks Rarekind Records Sunday Session funk & soul rarities from past & present 10-2amThomas Kemp Tinglely Tangly Treats 7pm £freeThe Victory Social Poker Night 7pm £1White Rabbit Jazz Sundays 3pm startXuma Jazz 8-10pm

MONDAY 9TH

Belushi’s Quiz night 8.30-11pm £freeBelushi’s below Industry Night party tunes 9-2am £freeThe Black Lion Happy Mon-days Live music 6pm £free happy hour all nightThe Brunswick Acting Classes Theatre 10.30am & 7.30pm 7Coalition Trash Mondays Stu-dent night 10.30-3.30am £free b411The Druids Quizzageddon a pub quiz to test knowledge, skill, and awesomeness 8:30pm 1Duke of Beaufort free pool 8pmEasy Bar Social Poker 8pm £5 all inFountain Head Quiz with Char-lotte questions, singing rounds + playdough! 8pm £1Funky Buddah Mashed up 11-3am £2/3 (£free b4 12)

Honey Club ‘DETENTION’ -£FREE to everyone before midnight / £2 UBSU / £3 Others after.10.30pm-2.30amHope The H’Open Mic 8.30pm £freeJuggler AKL open mic 8-1 3freeKomedia Brakes 8.30pm £9Kulture U Dirty Stop Out buy one drink get two drinks free all night 7-3am £3The latest Music Bar Break-through with Rough Trade Djs + live acts £3/£2 NUSLife Stampede Student night 10.30-2.30am NUS £free/£2The Marlborough Free Pool lunch-closePitcher & Piano Unfunkinbe-lievable: All pints £1.85, Vodka and Mixer £2, Selected cocktails 2-4-1 Prince Albert Brighton Belles W.I 8pmThomas Kemp Superbang Quiz/games night 9pm £freeThe Three Graces Quiz 7.30pm £freeVolks BIG T presents Strictly Reg-gae Dancehall Bashment 10-Late £5/£4 cheap drinksXuma Cheese and Wine 8-cl + Poker 8pm (poker starts)

Page 37: November edition of BN1 Magazine

TUESDAY 10TH Audio New Slang alt/indie/electro night 10pm-2am £3Belushi’s below Elements DnB 9-2am £freeThe Brunswick Open Mic Live Music 8pm £FreeThe Brunswick Language Classes - Beginner Other 7pm £5Coalition Salsabrighton dance classes 8pm £6/£4 for classesCoalition Latin Fever (Club Night) club night 10pm til 3am £3/£2 B4 12Duke of Beaufort curry night curry+pint £5Duke of Norfolk Open mic night Blue’s mix, Country, Modern + Acoustic 9pm £freeEasy Bar Ink Fish Tuesdays Request night 8pm £freeFiddlers Quizness Time 8pm £1Fountain Head open mic Musi-cians, Poets, Magicians, Comedi-ans + storytellers 9-11pm £freeFunky Buddah Wireless pop, dance + commercial RnB 10.30-3.30am £3The Globe Basement Cinema Baraka and Sleep Furiously 8-late £freeHoney Club Indie Rock £1/2Hope Club Hope Live music 8pm £3Jam Kong Presents live upcoming bands 8-10.30 £4/2Juggler Are you BIMM? live bands £free (happy hour 4 BIMM students)Komedia Two Spot Gobi- soul/pop 7pm £6Komedia Martha Tilston and the Woods- folk 7.30pm £10The latest Music Bar Access to Music Live music Doors 7.30 pm Show 8pm £2/Free to ATM studentsLife The Vice Social Student night 10.30-2.30am NUS £free/£2The Marlborough Bring The Noise BYOMP3 8-closePitcher & Piano Cocktail Party: 2-4-1 on all cocktails, all night Prince Albert 900 Spaces+Illustrators+Dan Shears & Velveteen Orchestra 8pmRikiTiks Swafe DJs Hip-hop, reg-gae, funk & soul 11-3amSidewinder Bangers and

Mashup 100+ combinations of Sausage, Mash and Gravies £5 till 9.30Thomas Kemp Nuts Poker League National tournament 7.30pm £freeVolks Pure F!lth - now wash your hands Jungle/DnB/dubstep/tekno/gabber 10-4amXuma Open Mic 8-11pm

WEDNESDAY 11TH Audio Early show: Square Roots The Field 7pm £tbcAudio Supercharged Breaks night 10.30-2.20am £5/3Belushi’s below Strapped Stu-dent Night 10-2am £free NUSThe Black Lion Fresh Acous-tics live music 8.30-12.30am £freeThe Brunswick Language Classes - Intermediate Other 7pm 5The Brunswick Laugh Your Bits Off Comedy 8pm 6Coalition Cha Mon indie/ party hits 10.30-3am £2/3/4Concorde2 Alabama 3 Infectious, irresistible beats and memorizing rhythms 7.30pm £16 + bf in advDuke of Norfolk Quiz night 9pm £1Fish Bowl Fisherman’s chronicles Open mic / acoustic Jam 8-12 £freeThe Hamptons Mike’s Music Quiz 8pm £freeJam Ghost Ryde hip-hop night 10-2am £2Juggler Bakk Lamp Fall’ 5 Piece Traditional West African Band 8pm £freeKomedia The Great Lake Swimmers- folk/rock 7.30pm £10Kulture Wii Wednesdays Stu-dent Night 7-1am £freeThe latest Music Bar Nathan Ball + Cate Ferris + Carrie Tree Live music Doors 8pm £5Life Lets Kill Disco indie, electro, dnb, breaks 10.30-2.30am NUS £free/£1The Marlborough Poker night Texas Hold’em Tournament 8-closeOcean Rooms Blag Alternative Student Party 11-3am £freePitcher & Piano Cocktail Party: 2-4-1 on all cocktails, all night

Prince Albert Ramona’s [All Girl Ramones Tribute Band] + Dog End Disco+Tbc 8pmRikiTiks To the Floor Indie, roc, electro 10-2amSidewinder Steak+quiz night steak £7, Quiz £1The Three Graces Area Code mixture of blues, tex mex, and NICE folk 9pm £freeVolks ray kieth plus residents DnB/Dubstep 11-3am £free/£1Western Front Upfront live music 8-12pm £freeXuma Quiz 8.30-10.30pm

THURSDAY 12TH Audio Shameless Pop night 11pm-2.30am £2Belushi’s Karaoke 9-2am £freeBelushi’s below Party on the Ceiling Bands + DJ 9.30-2am £2The Black Lion Attic Monkeys Motown, 60s, Rare 70s Funk, 80s Hip Hop 8.30pm £freeThe Brunswick Sweet Char-lotte Live Music 8pm £3/£2Coalition Secret Discotheque shamefully unfashionable music 11-3 £tbcConcorde2 Brand New Heavies one of the UKs biggest acid jazz funk bands 8pm £16.50 + bf in advDuke of Norfolk Live music night 9-11pm £freeEasy Bar Free Fall DnB + Dub step from DJ Threts + friends 9-1am £freeFiddlers Fiddle Sticks live music 9pm £freeFish Bowl Residents Associa-tion Dj’s playing eclectic mix of hip hop, funk + more 10-3am £freeFunky Buddah Bang Bang Request night 9-3.30 £freeThe Globe Live Music 8-11pm £freeThe Hamptons Accoustic ses-sions Live local acts 9.30pm £freeHoney Club Fusion-3 rooms of dance music £1 before 11.30pm/NUS / £3 others after 11.30pm with a free shot! Drinks from £1 all night! 11pm-3am. Hope Live Alt folk night Scenic routes, Jaime Regan, Glen Belt + Steve Elston 7.30pm £5/6

Page 38: November edition of BN1 Magazine

The Hub Open Mic 8.30pmJam Fish Fry 50’s US Rhythm & Blues/ original Jamaican Ska + more 10-2am £3Juggler Are you BIMM? live bands £free (happy hour 4 BIMM students)Komedia Hammer and Tongue- slam poetry 8pm £5Komedia Jim Jeffries- comedy 8pm £12.50Komedia Old Rope Comedy 8pm £8.50/6.50Kulture Naughty Thursdays Student night 7-3am £freeThe latest Music Bar Catalyst Club An event which blends old French Salon with debating societ-ies 8pm £5Life Club NME 10.30-3am £2/1The Marlborough Open Mic Marly Accoustic Jam night 8-closeThe Marlborough (Theatre upstairs) Dead As A Dodo Brand new comedy 8pm £6/5Pitcher & Piano Unfunkinbe-lievable: All pints £1.85, Vodka and Mixer £2, Selected cocktails 2-4-1 Prince Albert The Tales+Capital+Lulla Violet 8pmProvidence Chris Austwick + Dan Markland + Lucy Osborn Acoustic Night 8pm £freeRikiTiks Show-go-cube-oh Eclectic gems from Orv & friends 11-3amTru House Party Jam Masters, Lee Garrett, Chris Shepherd 10.30-2-30am £3/4/5The Victory Open Mic Night 8pm £freeVolks Them Brighton Launch Dubstep, grime, jungle, electro, bassline 10-3am £5/6Western Front Blingual Lan-guage Exchange Party 8-late £freeWhite Rabbit Open Mic with the move-ons 8pm StartXuma Swishing 7-9pm

FRIDAY 13TH Audio Square Roots Dubstep with DMZ - Mala/Loefah/Pokes 11-4 £tbcBelushi’s Coyote Ugly dance competition 9-2am £freeBelushi’s below Skool Disco 70’s,80’s,90’s rock, pop & disco 10-

2am £2/free NUSThe Black Lion Dubrockerslive Dub, Reggae, Ska + Funk night 6pm £free happy hour till 9The Brunswick Sweet Hove Chicago Live Music 8pm 3Coalition Bonobo (tru thoughts) DJ set 10.30-3am £tbcConcorde2 Hundred Reasons post-hardcore anthems 7-10pm £12 + bf in advThe Druids Foe and Friends Funk, Soul, Hip hop, Beats, Trip Hop, Reggae, Ska, Latin, and World music 10pm £freeDuke of Beaufort Blow out live DJs 11-1am £freeDuke of Norfolk Live guest Djs 9-2am £freeFish Bowl Return Of The Funky Man live music + DJs 9-3am £freeFortune of War Niall & Dan Watts (Gogglez) 9.30-1.30 £freeThe Globe All time top 100 Guest DJs playing all time top 1000 9-2am £freeGrand Central DJ Ivan The Hamptons Funkin Friday Jazzy D and guests spin Jazz, funk, Brazilian beats + more 9pm £free Honey Club Corona Ministry of Sound Tour £TBCHope HEART NIGHT Djs / Live bands 8.30-late £3.50Hove Town Hall Children in Need fundraiser Clayton Strange, Xanthus, Heels Catch Fire, The Curst Sons 7-12 £5 / £4NUS or adv.The Hub Pineapple Tribe live music 8pm £freeJam Broke resident djs playing glitch-hop, dubstep, jungle, breaks + dnb 11-3am £freeKomedia Krater Comedy Club- 7.30pm, £22.50(meal-deal)/£12.50/£10 conc.Komedia Brighton Jazz Club 8pm £12/10/8 NUSKomedia Trailer Trash! Presents Vampires vs Zom-bies- movie themed club night 9.30pm £10/8Komedia Laid Back & Late Piano Bar with Glen Richard-son 11pm £3Komedia Balkanesca- gypsy beats 11pm £6/5

Kulture Fresh Fridays 7-3am £freeThe latest Music Bar Charity Chuckles in aid of the Sussex Cancer Fund Live Comedy 10pm £6Life Daft Life Alt.dance, electro and indie-leaning house 11-3am £4/5The Marlborough Q&A (Queer & Alternative) Indie, electro, soul, punk, and old school 5-closeThe Marlborough (Theatre upstairs) Marlborough Mash Up Special Live music at the Marl-borough 8pmOcean Rooms Freebass fridays 11-5am £freePitcher & Piano DJ Daniel De Silver mixing house and chart remixes until 2am, free entry Prince Albert Night Marchers + Dan Sartain + Support 8pmProvidence Feverking + School for Scoundrels + Telepathetic Indie Rock Night 8pm £1RikiTiks Looking Sound Present ‘3D Beats multi projection Video Scratch & VJ night 10-3amSidewinder Get Yuh Own @ Sidewinder hip hop, soul, jazz, funk, world and future Thomas Kemp DJ night 8-1am £freeUmi Hotel Student Film Festi-val Awards 8-1pm1 £8The Victory DJ Lanx Mod, Rock, Blues, Classic Pop 9pm £freeVolks CARBON puredrumand-bass 90 minute set from marcus intalex and spirit plus residents 11-5am £5 b4 11.30Western Front Bar Breaks Beats DJs playing Hip-Hop, Funk, Electro House & Breaks 9-2am £free

SATURDAY 14TH Audio SOL house/electro with Idiotproof, Schtumm! DJs 11-4 £freeBelushi’s Credit Crunch Satur-days live acoustic duo 9-2am £freeBelushi’s below Good Times over 25’s party 9.30-2am £5The Black Lion Medium Rare Funk, Soul + Stupendous Rare Grooves 8.30pm £freeThe Brunswick Tribal Vibe Live Music 8pm 5

Page 39: November edition of BN1 Magazine

Coalition Floorplay house with Prok+Fitch 10-4am £10/8 (£7 b4 11)Coalition Blow (afterparty) house/ electro/ techno £7/5/4 3am-7amConcorde2 Orange Goblin The best Stoner rock UK has ever produced + Symphony Cult + Thoughts Collide + more 3-10pm £10 + bf in advConcorde2 Kings of the Jungle Allnighter Micky Finn + Nicky Black-market + Bryan Gee + Ragga Twins + Kenny Ken… 11pm £8 + bfThe Druids Get Yuh Own Hip Hop, Funk, Soul, Jazz, World, Fu-ture and other treats 10pm £freeDuke of Beaufort SatNight-IsGonnaB-Alwite back beat ska night 8pm £freeDuke of Norfolk Soul Train soul, funk + grooves 9-2am £freeEngine Rooms IT’S 1969 OK! acid rock + psychedelic soul from DJ’s Radio Saigon 11pm £5/4Fish Bowl DJ Abo + Ally Smith dirty funk and dancefl oor jazz 9-3am £freeFortune of War Nick Da Record 9.30-1.30 £freeFunky Buddah Buddah Soul Mike Panteli with R&B, House + reminiscent party tunes 11-3am £10Funky Buddah Marlon M pres-ents Afterparty 3-7amThe Globe Music is the Answer electric direction eclectic selection 9-2am £freeGrand Central Fantango live music The Hamptons Electric atmospheres Progressive house, electric house, lounge, break beat 9 till late £freeHectors House Stay Sick! The Misbegotten + Stay Sick! DJ’s 8pm £freeHobgoblin Gasmask Terror + Dead In The Woods + Good Wife hardcore punk noise rock 8pm £5Honey Club SEVENSINS Presents…Jonathan Ulysses 11pm till 4.30am £10 Hope Murderdisco Synth pop, indie disco, rock hop 9-2am £3Jam Sweet Sensations reggae night 10-3 £5 (ladies half price)Komedia Krater Comedy Club 7pm & 10.30pm, £26.50(meal-deal, 7pm only)/£16.50

Komedia Big Wheel’s Revue- motown 9pm £10Komedia Brighton Rock 11pm £8/6Kulture Freak!! 7-3am £free b4 11The latest Music Bar Big Wheels Revue Timeless, Classic, Motown Doors 7.30pm, show 8.30-10.30pm £8The latest Music Bar SWAFE Live UK hip-hop 9pm £4/3Life HOLD UP! Indie night 11-4am £5Life High Society house music after party 3.30-7am £3/4/5The Marlborough Girls Rock On 8-clsoeThe Marlborough (Theatre upstairs) Eat Your Heart Out Performance Party with femme fatty 8pm £5/3Ocean Rooms Upfront Dance 11-5amPitcher & Piano The Ultimate Party, always buzzing with music for all, Reserve areas of the bar free of charge, until 2am, free entry. Prince Albert Wrapped In Plastic + The Cylons + Guests 2pmPrince Albert Deadbeat Decen-dant + Guests 8pmProvidence Thunk + The Koan Brothers + Tom Odell Rock Night 8pm £1RikiTiks DJs with live percussion & vocals Sidewinder Tape2Tape mix of 80s pop, electro and indie sounds 9-12 £freeThe Three Graces This Is My Epicentre up and coming acoustic talent 8pmUmi Hotel Student Film Festi-val Awards 7-11pm £8Volks Dubstep Mayhem DJs TBC 11-4 £5advThe West Hill Tonight We Fly Epic Pop Melodrama + Cinematic Sounds 9-3am £freeWestern Front Dj’s playing House, Electro, Funk and Breaks 9-2am £freeWhite Rabbit The Rabbit Rabbit Rabbit Djs 8pm Start

SUNDAY 15TH Audio Communion live indie

bands/DJs 7-2amBelushi’s Open Mic Session 8.30-midnight £freeBelushi’s below Latin ses-sions Salsa & Samba ladies free b4 11The Black Lion Dubrockerslive Dub, Reggae, Ska + Funk night 6pm £free happy hour till 9The Brunswick Radio City The-atre 2pm £FreeThe Brunswick Magdalena Reis-ing & The Blue Café Jazz Ensemble Live Music 8pm £7/£6Coalition Frequency house night 11-4am £10The Druids The Downsound Sessions downtempo beats, bro-ken down grooves, soul, laid back latin, trip hop. 9pm £freeDuke of Beaufort Beaufort Blues Club 2-7pm £freeFiddlers Sha-Rock open night legendary, brilliant, Guinness-sod-den 9pm £freeFish Bowl Recovery rare reggae and soul 9-2am freeThe Hamptons Retro Sunday Roasts and old skool tunes ending the week in style! Honey Club Spectrum 10.30pm-2.30am £2 b4 mid-night / £3 after with a Free shot on entryHope SRH Sunday Night Hard-core Jam the best of the South East Hardcore scene 7pm £5Komedia Krater Comedy Club 8pm, £20(meal-deal)/£10/£6 conc.Komedia Final Cut- short fi lms 7.30pm £4The latest Music Bar Vine-yard? Live music 7pm £freeThe Marlborough (Theatre upstairs) Dr Sketchy’s Art Cabaret Burlesque interactive life drawing 8pmPitcher & Piano Unfunkinbe-lievable: All pints £1.85, Vodka and Mixer £2, Selected cocktails 2-4-1 Prince Albert Us & Them + Rothko + Greg Foley + Will Mussett 8pmRikiTiks Rarekind Records Sunday Session Wyndham with funk & soul rarities from past & present 10-2amUmi Hotel Student Film Festi-

Page 40: November edition of BN1 Magazine

val Awards 7-9.30pm £8The Victory Social Poker Night 7pm £1

MONDAY 16TH Ancient Mariner 100th Pub Quiz 8pm £1Belushi’s Quiz night 8.30-11pm £freeBelushi’s below Industry Night party tunes 9-2am £freeThe Black Lion Happy Mon-days Live music 6pm £free happy hour all nightThe Brunswick Acting Classes Theatre 10.30am & 7.30pm 7The Brunswick Straight No Chaser Live Music 8pm £FreeCoalition Trash Mondays Stu-dent night 10.30-3.30am £free b411Concorde2 Gary Moore + sup-port 8pm £26.50 + bfDuke of Beaufort free pool 8pmEasy Bar Social Poker 8pm £5 all inFountain Head Quiz with Char-lotte questions, singing rounds + playdough! 8pm £1Funky Buddah Mashed up 11-3am £2/3 (£free b4 12)

Honey Club ‘DETENTION’ -£FREE to everyone before midnight / £2 UBSU / £3 Others after.10.30pm-2.30amHope The H’Open Mic 8.30pm £freeJam IOU comedy 8-10.30 £tbcJuggler AKL open mic 8-1 3freeKomedia Nell Bryden- singer/songwriter 7.30pm £9Komedia Gliss- garage rock 8pm £6Kulture U Dirty Stop Out buy one drink get two drinks free all night 7-3am £3The latest Music Bar Break-through with Rough Trade: Djs + live acts Doors 8pm Starts 8.30pm £5/£4 NUSLife Stampede Student night 10.30-2.30am NUS £free/£2The Marlborough Free Pool lunch-closePitcher & Piano Unfunkinbe-lievable: All pints £1.85, Vodka and Mixer £2, Selected cocktails 2-4-1 Prince Albert Blue Roses + Sup-

port 8pmThomas Kemp Superbang Quiz/games night 9pm £freeVolks BIG T presents Strictly Reggae Dancehall Bashment 10-Late £5/£4 cheap drinks

TUESDAY 17TH Audio Early show Wavves 7pm £8advAudio New Slang alt/indie/electro night 10pm-2am £3Belushi’s below Elements DnB 9-2am £freeThe Brunswick Open Mic Live Music 8pm £FreeThe Brunswick Language Classes - Beginner Other 7pm £5Coalition Salsabrighton dance classes 8pm £6/£4 for classesCoalition Latin Fever (Club Night) club night 10pm til 3am £3/£2 B4 12Duke of Beaufort curry night curry+pint £5Duke of Norfolk Open mic night Blue’s mix, Country, Modern + Acoustic 9pm £freeEasy Bar Ink Fish Tuesdays Request night 8pm £freeFiddlers Quizness Time 8pm £1Fountain Head open mic Musi-cians, Poets, Magicians, Comedi-ans + storytellers 9-11pm £freeFunky Buddah Wireless pop, dance + commercial RnB 10.30-3.30am £3The Globe Basement Cinema Kind Hearts & Coronets and Brief Encounter 8-late £freeHoney Club Indie Rock £1/2Hope Gloria Cycles and the Polka Party Live music 8-late £5Jam Kong Presents live upcom-ing bands 8-10.30 £4/2Juggler Are you BIMM? live bands £free (happy hour 4 BIMM students)The latest Music Bar Cafe Sci-entifi que Consciousness in Humans and Other Animals 7.30pm £free (donations)Life The Vice Social Student night 10.30-2.30am NUS £free/£2The Marlborough Bring The Noise BYOMP3 8-closePitcher & Piano Cocktail Party: 2-4-1 on all cocktails, all night Prince Albert Sweet Ether+Annie

Jump Cannon+The Sylence 8pmRikiTiks Swafe DJs Hip-hop, reg-gae, funk & soul 11-3amSidewinder Bangers and Mashup 100+ combinations of Sausage, Mash and Gravies £5 till 9.30Thomas Kemp Nuts Poker League National tournament 7.30pm £freeVolks SKANK dubstep/tribal dub 11-4am £free

WEDNESDAY 18TH

Audio Supercharged Breaks night 10.30-2.20am £5/3Belushi’s below Strapped Stu-dent Night 10-2am £free NUSThe Black Lion Fresh Acous-tics live music 8.30-12.30am £freeThe Brunswick Language Classes - Intermediate Other 7pm £5The Brunswick Melons A Trois Comedy 8pm £TBCCoalition Cha Mon indie/ party hits 10.30-3am £2/3/4Concorde2 VV Brown singer, songwriter, performer, multi-instru-mentalist and producer 8pm £7.50 + bf in advDuke of Norfolk Quiz night 9pm £1Fish Bowl Fisherman’s chronicles Open mic / acoustic Jam 8-12 £freeThe Globe Wrong music mashup 9-2am £freeThe Hamptons Farm meeting Web design and software develop-ment meeting. All welcome 8.30pm £freeHope Emergenza Festival: Battle Of The Bands 7-late £10 (3 nights)Jam Ghost Ryde hip-hop night 10-2am £2Juggler Bakk Lamp Fall’ 5 Piece Traditional West African Band 8pm £freeKomedia Elephant III 8.30pm £8Kulture Wii Wednesdays Stu-dent Night 7-1am £freeThe latest Music Bar Spotlight Players presents: Cinderella with a Twist in the Tale in aid of the Alzheimers Society Doors 6.30pm, show 7.00pm £8/5

Page 41: November edition of BN1 Magazine

Life Lets Kill Disco indie, electro, dnb, breaks 10.30-2.30am NUS £free/£1The Marlborough Poker night Texas Hold’em Tournament 8-closeOcean Rooms Blag Alternative Student Party 11-3am £freePitcher & Piano Cocktail Party: 2-4-1 on all cocktails, all night Prince Albert Alektorophobia + Toy + Support 8pmRikiTiks To the Floor Indie, roc, electro 10-2amSidewinder Steak+quiz night steak £7, Quiz £1The Victory Open Mic Night 8pm £freeVolks ruffstuff plus residents DnB/Dubstep 11-3am £free/£1Western Front Upfront live music 8-12pm £free

THURSDAY 19TH Audio Shameless Pop night 11pm-2.30am £2Basement Type PR + Slowfoot Records present Crackle (Slowfoot), Grasscut (Ninja Tune) + Sculpture 8-11pm £5adv £6 on doorBelushi’s Karaoke 9-2am £freeBelushi’s below Party on the Ceiling Bands + DJ 9.30-2am £2The Black Lion Attic Monkeys Motown, 60s, Rare 70s Funk, 80s Hip Hop 8.30pm £freeThe Brunswick Joogleberry Presents… Soul Live Music 8pm £7Coalition Secret Discotheque shamefully unfashionable music 11-3 £tbcDuke of Norfolk Live music night 9-11pm £freeEasy Bar Free Fall DnB + Dub step from DJ Threts + friends 9-1am £freeFiddlers Fiddle Sticks live music 9pm £freeFish Bowl Residents Associa-tion Dj’s playing eclectic mix of hip hop, funk + more 10-3am £freeFunky Buddah Bang Bang Request night 9-3.30 £freeThe Globe Live Music 8-11pm £freeThe Hamptons Accoustic ses-sions Live local acts 9.30pm £freeHoney Club Fusion-3 rooms of dance music £1 before

11.30pm/NUS / £3 others after 11.30pm with a free shot! Drinks from £1 all night! 11pm-3am. Hope Emergenza Festival: Battle Of The Bands 7-late £10 (3 nights)The Hub Open Mic 8.30pmJam Fish Fry 50’s US Rhythm & Blues/ original Jamaican Ska + more 10-2am £3Juggler Are you BIMM? live bands £free (happy hour 4 BIMM students)Komedia 12 Stone Toddler 8pm £8Komedia Julia Biel- singer/songwriter 8.15pm £8Kulture Naughty Thursdays Student night 7-3am £freeThe latest Music Bar Spotlight Players presents: Cinderella with a Twist in the Tale in aid of the Alzheimers Society Doors 6.30pm, show 7.00pm £8/5Life Club NME 10.30-3am £2/1The Marlborough Open Mic Marly Accoustic Jam night 8-closePitcher & Piano Unfunkinbe-lievable: All pints £1.85, Vodka and Mixer £2, Selected cocktails 2-4-1 Prince Albert Rob The Rich+The Sarah Michelles+Vernie And Ber-trum 8pmProvidence Codes + Ian Mark Burizo + Support Acoustic Night 8pm £freeRikiTiks Show-go-cube-oh Eclectic gems from Orv & friends 11-3amTru House Party Jam Masters, Lee Garrett, Chris Shepherd 10.30-2-30am £3/4/5Volks Voltage launch party DnB Dubstep acid techno gabber 10-Late £free b4 11Western Front Blingual Lan-guage Exchange Party 8-late £freeWhite Rabbit Local Live Fresh Brighton talent 8pm Start

FRIDAY 20TH Audio Minimal kids ak/ak - techno 11-4am £5/8Belushi’s Coyote Ugly dance competition 9-2am £freeBelushi’s below Skool Disco 70’s,80’s,90’s rock, pop & disco 10-

2am £2/free NUSThe Black Lion Return of the Funky Man breaks, beats, soul and funk 8.30pm £freeThe Brunswick Blunted Presents KaraUke Live Music 8pm £3 motdCoalition Carnivalesque Work-shops, performances and music by Los Chinches, Rockabilly band Dierre + Manouchska. £9/11 (£7 for fancy dress)Concorde2 SILENT DISCO rescheduled show from 16th Octo-ber. tickets brought for the previous date remain valid for this, if you are unable to attend this show refunds available from point of purchase 11pm £8 + bf in advThe Druids Hot Pepper Sauce Funk and Soul, reggae and dance DJ 10-3am £freeDuke of Beaufort Blow out live DJs 11-1am £freeDuke of Norfolk Live guest Djs 9-2am £freeFish Bowl LateNight Loungin spinning disco, funk and all that good stuff 9-3am £freeFortune of War First Rate (Ex-Scratch Perverts/Dmc Itf Champion) 9.30-1.30 £freeThe Globe All time top 100 Guest DJs playing all time top 1000 9-2am £freeGrand Central DJ Ivan The Hamptons Funkin Friday Jazzy D and guests spin Jazz, funk, Brazilian beats + more 9pm £free Honey Club CONNECTED WITH JESSE JAMES£8 before 11.30pm / £10 after. 11pm-4am Hope Emergenza Festival: Battle Of The Bands 7-late £10 (3 nights)Hope Stacked Nasty (Down-stairs) 50’s RnB, 60’s Garage, Grind, Jump Blues 9-2am £freeThe Hub The Fish Brothers live music 8pm £freeJam Flashguns early show 7pm £tbcJam Broke resident djs playing glitch-hop, dubstep, jungle, breaks + dnb 11-3am £freeKomedia Krater Comedy Club- 7.30pm, £22.50(meal-deal)/£12.50/£10 conc.Komedia Brighton Jazz Club 8pm £12/10/8 NUS

Page 42: November edition of BN1 Magazine

Komedia Dreadzone 8pm £14Komedia Born Bad- rockabilly 11pm £6/5Kulture Fresh Fridays 7-3am £freeThe latest Music Bar Spotlight Players presents: Cinderella with a Twist in the Tale in aid of the Alzheimers Society Doors 6.30pm, show 7.00pm £8/5The latest Music Bar Frocka-billy Rockabilly, rock’n’roll blues gay and straight night 10pm til 2.30am £5Life Daft Life Alt.dance, electro and indie-leaning house 11-3am £4/5The Loft November Spawned a Mozzer Morrissey & The Smiths tribute party 10-3am £3/5The Marlborough Q&A (Queer & Alternative) Indie, electro, soul, punk, and old school 5-closeThe Marlborough (Theatre upstairs) Pride Fundraiser Live muic, cabaret, Drag. All donations going to Pride 8pmOcean Rooms Freebass fridays 11-5am £freePitcher & Piano DJ Daniel De Silver mixing house and chart remixes until 2am, free entry Prince Albert Silverfl ec + Support 8pmProvidence Lostaura, The Badje, Doctor Pop + Strange Gathering Indie Night 8pm £1RikiTiks DJ Oddsocks Eclectic 11-3amSidewinder Get Yuh Own @ Sidewinder hip hop, soul, jazz, funk, world and future Thomas Kemp DJ night 8-1am £freeThe Three Graces Fall From Grace disco funk with DJ Fondue Inferno 8pmThe Victory Kinema Pop, Dance Rock + 80’s 9pm £freeVolks One love festival reunion & Unity hifi 5th birthday dubstep, Uk steppers, Roots Reggae, Dancehall 11-5am £6 b4 12Western Front Bar Breaks Beats DJs playing Hip-Hop, Funk, Electro House & Breaks 9-2am £freeWhite Rabbit WTF Achilles Djs Mr Mathew Garland + Stef F 8pm Start

SATURDAY 21ST Ancient Mariner Black Hats Acoustic Sessions 8.30pmAudio SOL house/electro with Filthy Dukes (Live) 11-4 £freeBelushi’s Credit Crunch Satur-days live acoustic duo 9-2am £freeBelushi’s below Good Times over 25’s party 9.30-2am £5The Black Lion Burnt Toast with Radio Reverb soul,funk, breaks + hip hop 8.30pm £freeThe Brunswick The Blues Corporation Live Music 8pm £9/£8Coalition Pop Musik Live Showcase Early Show Heels Catch Fire, The Half Sisters And Achilles 8-11pm £4/5 (with free entry to night)Coalition Pop Musik club night 11-4am £10/6/5Coalition Blow (afterparty) house/ electro/ techno £7/5/4 3am-7amConcorde2 Subwar Digital Mystikz + Youngsta + Commix + Lenzman + MC ID + more tbc 11pm £7NUS/£10 + bf in advThe Druids Nostalgiadelia Inter-national funk and otherworldly soul 10-3am £freeDuke of Beaufort SatNight-IsGonnaB-Alwite back beat ska night 8pm £freeDuke of Norfolk Soul Train soul, funk + grooves 9-2am £freeFish Bowl SumSuch Lounging Records boss with a 6 hours of funk, hip hop + breaks 9-3am £freeFortune of War Dj Derek Reg-gae, Rocksteady And A Bristolian Accent On The Mic 9.30-1.30 £freeFunky Buddah Buddah Soul Mike Panteli with R&B, House + reminiscent party tunes 11-3am £10Funky Buddah Mike Pantali vs DJ Outbreak Afterparty 3-7amThe Globe Donkey goes Global electronica, hip hop and dubstep 9-2am £freeGrand Central Michael Clayton live music The Greenhouse Effect Paradise 9, Sumerian Kyngs + Dirty Scavenger live music 8-late £5/4The Hamptons Twisted Disco DJ Jazzy D. Soul, funk, hip hop, dance and D&B 9pm £free

Honey Club SEVENSINS Presents…Jonathan Ulysses 11pm till 4.30am £10 Hope Anvil Recording Co 10th Anniversary Live music 7pm-late £3Hope Sunday Sessions hang-over cure live music 8pm £4/3Komedia Krater Comedy Club 7pm & 10.30pm, £26.50(meal-deal, 7pm only)/£16.50Komedia Spellbound- alt 80’s night- 9pm £5/4Komedia Kroon Kat Lounge- retro cabaret 9pm £25 (meal deal)/15Kulture Freak!! 7-3am £free b4 11The latest Music Bar Spotlight Players presents: Cinderella with a Twist in the Tale in aid of the Alzheimers Society (Day) Doors 2.00pm til show 2.30pm £8/£5... (Eve) Doors 7.30pm til show 8.00pm £8/no concessions - ticket price includes after show party until 2.30amLife HOLD UP! Indie night 11-4am £5The Marlborough Girls Rock On 8-clsoeThe Marlborough (Theatre upstairs) Pride Fundraiser Live muic, cabaret, Drag. All donations going to Pride 8pmOcean Rooms Smut 11-5am £6/8/10Pitcher & Piano The Ultimate Party, always buzzing with music for all, Reserve areas of the bar free of charge, until 2am, free entry. Prince Albert Club Meow With The All The Trimmings 8pmProvidence The Parody, Chukin + Dog end Disco Rock Night 8pm £2RikiTiks B-Movie funk, soul and other music inspired by fi lms 10-3amThomas Kemp Sound Market 8pm £freeThe Victory Social Poker Night 7pm £1Volks Darklight vs Strictly Drumz Fabio, Inter, DLM, Billy Disco + More 10-5am £3Western Front Dj’s playing House, Electro, Funk and Breaks 9-2am £freeWhite Rabbit This is SPARTA!

Page 43: November edition of BN1 Magazine

300 party with The Rabbit Rabbit Rabbit Djs 8pm StartXuma Antiques Fair 1-5pm

SUNDAY 22ND Belushi’s Open Mic Session 8.30-midnight £freeBelushi’s below Latin ses-sions Salsa & Samba ladies free b4 11The Black Lion Dubrockerslive Dub, Reggae, Ska + Funk night 6pm £free happy hour till 9The Brunswick Jason Rebello Live Music 8pm 10Coalition Frequency house night 11-4am £10Concorde2 Breakestra ten-piece funk “orchestra” from Los Angeles. Fusing elements of hip hop, funk, and soul into a sound unique to themselves + The Grand Majestic + more 7-10.30pm £13 + bf in advThe Druids The Downsound Sessions downtempo beats, bro-ken down grooves, soul, laid back latin, trip hop. 9pm £freeDuke of Beaufort Beaufort Blues Club 2-7pm £freeFiddlers Sha-Rock open night legendary, brilliant, Guinness-sod-den 9pm £freeFish Bowl Recovery rare reggae and soul 9-2am freeThe Hamptons Retro Sunday Roasts and old skool tunes ending the week in style! Honey Club Spectrum 10.30pm-2.30am £2 b4 mid-night / £3 after with a Free shot on entryHope Spikey Promotions acoustic sessions 4-6pm £freeKomedia Krater Comedy Club 8pm, £20(meal-deal)/£10/£6 conc.Komedia The Noise Next Door- comedy 7.30pm £8/6Komedia Lloyd Cole 7.30pm £17.50The Marlborough Big Gay Quiz 6-closePitcher & Piano Unfunkinbe-lievable: All pints £1.85, Vodka and Mixer £2, Selected cocktails 2-4-1 Prince Albert Winging It Com-edy Club 3pm

RikiTiks Rarekind Records Sunday Session Wyndham with funk & soul rarities from past & present 10-2amWhite Rabbit Jazz Sundays 3pm startXuma Jazz 8-10pm

MONDAY 23RD Belushi’s Quiz night 8.30-11pm £freeBelushi’s below Industry Night party tunes 9-2am £freeThe Black Lion Happy Mon-days Live music 6pm £free happy hour all nightThe Brunswick Acting Classes Theatre 10.30am & 7.30pm 7The Brunswick Charity Com-edy Night Comedy 8pm £TBCCoalition Trash Mondays Stu-dent night 10.30-3.30am £free b411Duke of Beaufort free pool 8pmEasy Bar Social Poker 8pm £5 all inFountain Head Quiz with Char-lotte questions, singing rounds + playdough! 8pm £1Fish Bowl BlackBeltJonez funk, hip-hop and general mayhem from DJ behind burnt toast (Redio Reverb) 9-3am £freeFunky Buddah Mashed up 11-3am £2/3 (£free b4 12)

Honey Club ‘DETENTION’ -£FREE to everyone before midnight / £2 UBSU / £3 Others after.10.30pm-2.30amHope The H’Open Mic 8.30pm £freeHope Anti-Folk Night DUFUS coming on tour to Brighton 7.30 £5/7Juggler AKL open mic 8-1 3freeKulture U Dirty Stop Out buy one drink get two drinks free all night 7-3am £3The latest Music Bar Break-through with Rough Trade Djs + live acts Doors 8pm Starts 8.30pm £5/£4 NUSLife Stampede Student night 10.30-2.30am NUS £free/£2The Marlborough Free Pool lunch-closePitcher & Piano Unfunkinbe-lievable: All pints £1.85, Vodka and Mixer £2, Selected cocktails 2-4-1

Prince Albert Born To Lose With Live Bands And D.Js 8pmThomas Kemp Superbang Quiz/games night 9pm £freeThe Three Graces Quiz 7.30pm £freeVolks BIG T presents Strictly Reggae Dancehall Bashment 10-Late £5/£4 cheap drinksXuma Cheese and Wine 8-cl + Poker 8pm (poker starts)

TUESDAY 24TH

Audio New Slang alt/indie/electro night 10pm-2am £3Belushi’s below Elements DnB 9-2am £freeThe Black Lion Reggae Barbecue Reggae bands, DJs + Jamaican Food 6-12pm £1The Brunswick Open Mic Live Music 8pm £FreeThe Brunswick Language Classes - Beginner Other 7pm £5Coalition Salsabrighton dance classes 8pm £6/£4 for classesCoalition Latin Fever (Club Night) club night 10pm til 3am £3/£2 B4 12Duke of Beaufort curry night curry+pint £5Duke of Norfolk Open mic night Blue’s mix, Country, Modern + Acoustic 9pm £freeEasy Bar Ink Fish Tuesdays Request night 8pm £freeFiddlers Quizness Time 8pm £1Fountain Head open mic Musi-cians, Poets, Magicians, Comedi-ans + storytellers 9-11pm £freeFunky Buddah Wireless pop, dance + commercial RnB 10.30-3.30am £3The Globe Basement Cinema Local Hero and The Wicker Man 8-late £freeHoney Club Indie Rock £1/2Jam Kong Presents live upcom-ing bands 8-10.30 £4/2Juggler Are you BIMM? live bands £free (happy hour 4 BIMM students)The latest Music Bar Access to Music Live music Doors 7.30 pm Show 8pm £2/Free to ATM studentsLife The Vice Social Student night 10.30-2.30am NUS £free/£2The Marlborough Bring The

Page 44: November edition of BN1 Magazine

Noise BYOMP3 8-closePitcher & Piano Cocktail Party: 2-4-1 on all cocktails, all night Prince Albert Dirty Leaves+The Lullabies+Damaged 8pmRikiTiks Swafe DJs Hip-hop, reg-gae, funk & soul 11-3amSidewinder Bangers and Mashup 100+ combinations of Sausage, Mash and Gravies £5 till 9.30Thomas Kemp Nuts Poker League National tournament 7.30pm £freeVolks Rusty Seas live bands + DJs

WEDNESDAY 25TH Audio Supercharged Breaks night 10.30-2.20am £5/3Belushi’s below Strapped Stu-dent Night 10-2am £free NUSThe Black Lion Fresh Acous-tics live music 8.30-12.30am £freeThe Brunswick Matthew George’s Boogie Woogie Troop Live Music 8pm 5The Brunswick Language Classes - Intermediate Other 7pm 5Coalition Cha Mon indie/ party hits 10.30-3am £2/3/4Concorde2 Sugar Minott driving force in pioneering the creation of reggae music+ Frankie Paul + Tony Tuff 8pm £15 + bfDuke of Norfolk Quiz night 9pm £1Fish Bowl Fisherman’s chronicles Open mic / acoustic Jam 8-12 £freeThe Hamptons Mike’s Music Quiz 8pm £freeHectors House Stay Sick! Monotonix, Winnebago Deal, Trip-pin Violet, Stay Sick! DJ’s 7pm £8 (£10 on door)Jam Ghost Ryde hip-hop inght 10-2am £2Juggler Bakk Lamp Fall’ 5 Piece Traditional West African Band 8pm £freeKomedia Lou Rhodes 8pm £6Komedia Alice Russell 7.30pm £12.50Kulture Wii Wednesdays Stu-dent Night 7-1am £freeThe latest Music Bar City

Socialising Free networking and socialising event 7.30pm £FreeLife Lets Kill Disco indie, electro, dnb, breaks 10.30-2.30am NUS £free/£1The Marlborough Poker night Texas Hold’em Tournament 8-closeOcean Rooms Blag Alternative Student Party 11-3am £freeOpen House Safehouse on the Edge Stefan keune & john Russell £5/6Pitcher & Piano Cocktail Party: 2-4-1 on all cocktails, all night Prince Albert Catfi sh Keith + Support 8pmRikiTiks To the Floor Indie, roc, electro 10-2amSidewinder Steak+quiz night steak £7, Quiz £1Volks kane plus residents DnB/Dubstep 11-3am £free/£1Western Front Upfront live music 8-12pm £freeXuma Quiz 8.30-10.30pm

THURSDAY 26TH Audio Shameless Pop night 11pm-2.30am £2Belushi’s Karaoke 9-2am £freeBelushi’s below Party on the Ceiling Bands + DJ 9.30-2am £2The Black Lion Modern Life is Rubbish roses to monkey + every-thing in between 8.30pm £freeThe Brunswick Battle Of The Bands - THE FINAL Live Music 8pm £FreeCoalition Secret Discotheque shamefully unfashionable music 11-3 £tbcConcorde2 New Model Army seminal punk/metal/rock group 7.30pm £17.50 + bf in advDuke of Norfolk Live music night 9-11pm £freeEasy Bar Free Fall DnB + Dub step from DJ Threts + friends 9-1am £freeFiddlers Fiddle Sticks live music 9pm £freeFish Bowl Residents Associa-tion Dj’s playing eclectic mix of hip hop, funk + more 10-3am £freeFunky Buddah Bang Bang Request night 9-3.30 £freeThe Globe Live Music 8-11pm £free

The Hamptons Accoustic ses-sions Live local acts 9.30pm £freeHope Our Little Secret alt music feat. tactical thinking, 100 Robots, L-Mo 8.30pm £4/3The Hub Open Mic 8.30pmJam Fish Fry 50’s US Rhythm & Blues/ original Jamaican Ska + more 10-2am £3Juggler Are you BIMM? live bands £free (happy hour 4 BIMM students)Komedia UK Snow Film Festival 6.30pm £15 (2day) £10 (1day)/£7 NUS (1day)Komedia Comic Boom! 8pm £8.50/6.50Honey Club Fusion-3 rooms of dance music £1 before 11.30pm/NUS / £3 others after 11.30pm with a free shot! Drinks from £1 all night! 11pm-3am. Kulture Naughty Thursdays Student night 7-3am £freeThe latest Music Bar Big Swing Live Live 6 piece band 8pm £10/9/8Life Club NME 10.30-3am £2/1The Marlborough Open Mic Marly Accoustic Jam night 8-closePitcher & Piano Unfunkinbe-lievable: All pints £1.85, Vodka and Mixer £2, Selected cocktails 2-4-1 Prince Albert Carrie Elkin + Danny Schmidt 8pm £7/6.5advProvidence Nick Mckenna + Alan Bonner (TBC) + Dan Stiles 8pm £freeRanelagh Shauna Parker & the Saloon Bar Band + Three Chords & the Truth Country,Americana + Western Swing 8.30pm £freeRikiTiks Show-go-cube-oh Eclectic gems from Orv & friends 11-3amTru House Party Jam Masters, Lee Garrett, Chris Shepherd 10.30-2-30am £3/4/5The Victory Open Mic Night 8pm £freeVolks Miss H presents RnB, Funky House, Bashment, Dubstep Western Front Blingual Lan-guage Exchange Party 8-late £freeWhite Rabbit Open Mic with the move-ons 8pm StartXuma Swishing 7-9pm

Page 45: November edition of BN1 Magazine

FRIDAY 27TH Audio Disco Libero Todd Terje + Disco Bloodbath 11-4am £tbcBelushi’s Coyote Ugly dance competition 9-2am £freeBelushi’s below Skool Disco 70’s,80’s,90’s rock, pop & disco 10-2am £2/free NUSThe Black Lion Old Shrimp Eyes funk, northern soul, mod revival + indie classics 8.30pm £freeThe Brunswick Samsara & The Resonators Live Music 8pm 5Coalition We Made you maxi-mal house music 11-4amConcorde2 The Bays pure improvisation and raw creative synergy +Natural Self + Fidgital + Puncture Kit 11pm 4am £8 early birds / £10 + bf in advThe Druids The Downsound Sessions downtempo beats, bro-ken down grooves, soul, laid back latin, trip hop. 9pm £freeDuke of Beaufort Blow out live DJs 11-1am £freeDuke of Norfolk Live guest Djs 9-2am £freeEasy Bar LED Failed Knights brings the best in Electro and house Fortune of War Jazzy Jon And The Fresh Pip 9.30-1.30 £freeThe Globe All time top 100 Guest DJs playing all time top 1000 9-2am £freeGrand Central DJ Ivan The Hamptons Funkin Friday Jazzy D and guests spin Jazz, funk, Brazilian beats + more 9pm £free Honey Club HED KANDI £10 / £8 NUS. 10.30pm-3.30am.Hope Mean Fiddler Presents: The Antlers + Guests Live music 8pm £6advJam Broke resident djs playing glitch-hop, dubstep, jungle, breaks + dnb 11-3am £freeKomedia Krater Comedy Club- 7.30pm, £22.50(meal-deal)/£12.50/£10 conc.Komedia Brighton Jazz Club 8pm £12/10/8 NUSKomedia Da Doo Ron Ron 11pm £5advKulture Fresh Fridays 7-3am £freeThe latest Music Bar Poleoke Poledancing meets Karaoke but

without the singing 7pm start (class+poleoke) £10 or 8pm start (just poleoke) £5The latest Music Bar Sirens Intergalactic Full on burlesque entertainment Doors 10.00pm Show 10.30pm Disco til 2am £7/5 NUSLife Daft Life Alt.dance, electro and indie-leaning house 11-3am £4/5The Marlborough Q&A (Queer & Alternative) Indie, electro, soul, punk, and old school 5-closeThe Marlborough (Theatre upstairs) Marlborough Mash Up Special Live music at the Marl-borough. 8pmOcean Rooms Freebass fridays 1st Birthday Special 11-5am £freePitcher & Piano DJ Daniel De Silver mixing house and chart remixes until 2am, free entry Providence Monthly Showcase Night 8pm £2RikiTiks Shakedown presents: Shades of blue Jazz & Jazz Funk 10-3amSidewinder Like a Sex Ma-chine 70s tribute night Thomas Kemp DJ night 8-1am £freeThe Victory Beans On Toast Radio Reverbs Hip Hop & Funk Master BlackBelt Jones 9pm £freeVolks Autopsy darkside DnB 11-5amWestern Front Bar Breaks Beats DJs playing Hip-Hop, Funk, Electro House & Breaks 9-2am £free

SATURDAY 28TH Ancient Mariner Human Juke-box request night 7.30pmAudio SOL house/electro with Jerry Bouthier 11-4 £freeBelushi’s Credit Crunch Satur-days live acoustic duo 9-2am £freeBelushi’s below Good Times over 25’s party 9.30-2am £5The Black Lion Medium Rare Funk, Soul + Stupendous Rare Grooves 8.30pm £freeThe Brunswick Ben Okafor Live Music 8pm £5Coalition Wired electro with David Jones, Vincent Manganaro and Carlos Ruiz 11-4am £10

Coalition Blow (afterparty) house/ electro/ techno £7/5/4 3am-7amConcorde2 Gun Scotish rock band who have quickly re-estab-lished themselves as the force in rock they once were 7.30pm £13 + bf in advConcorde2 Devotion presents Renegade Hardware Featuring Ink + Mampi Swift + Dom b2b Ed Rush + Gridlock 11pm £10 + bf in advThe Druids Foe and Friends Funk, Soul, Hip hop, Beats, Trip Hop, Reggae, Ska, Latin, and World music 10pm £freeDuke of Beaufort SatNightIs-GonnaB-Alwite back beat ska night 8pm £freeDuke of Norfolk Soul Train soul, funk + grooves 9-2am £freeFish Bowl Daddy Marcus sin-galong session of soul, disco, funk and party classics 9-3am £freeFortune of War Fip Radio!!! hooked up with Tru Thoughts, fi rst time to hear them live 9.30-1.30 £freeFunky Buddah Buddah Soul Mike Panteli with R&B, House + reminiscent party tunes 11-3am £10Funky Buddah Chillax After-party 3-7amThe Globe DJ Dan Warb break-beatjazzhouselectrovocaldowntem-poretrofunk 9-2am £freeThe Hamptons Twisted Disco DJ Jazzy D. Soul, funk, hip hop, dance and D&B 9pm £free Hobgoblin The Goo Goo Muck - Whitemare, Rodeo Death Burger + Stay Sick! DJ’s 7pm £freeHoney Club SEVENSINS Presents…Lottie 11pm till 4.30am £10 Hope Time Crisis Club Live music 9-2am £3/4Jam La Fiesta latin infl uenced un-derground house, techno + electro 10-3am £5/6Komedia Krater Comedy Club 7pm & 10.30pm, £26.50(meal-deal, 7pm only)/£16.50Komedia Who’s Who perform Tommy 8pm £10Komedia Stone to the bone- funk/soul 11-3am £5adv/6Kulture Freak!! 7-3am £free b4 11Life HOLD UP! Indie night 11-

Page 46: November edition of BN1 Magazine

4am £5The Marlborough Girls Rock On 8-closeThe Marlborough (Theatre upstairs) Naked Homo One naked man, ten naked scenes 8pm £6/5Ocean Rooms Student Central 11-5amPitcher & Piano The Ultimate Party, always buzzing with music for all, Reserve areas of the bar free of charge, until 2am, free entry. Prince Albert The Valentines+Clockworks+Tbc+My Element 8pmProvidence The Valentines (TBC) + Supports 8pm £1RikiTiks DJ Illson (Sound Surgery Records) Soul, funk, hip-hop 10-3amSidewinder Danceteria mix of disco, boogie, house, funk 6.30-10.30pm £freeThomas Kemp War on Want DJs and clothes swapping night raising money for war on want 8pm £free/donationThe Three Graces Go cat go Rockabilly night with DJ lonesome 8pmThe Victory Up Against It Born Bad DJs 9pm £freeVolks Slackers Convention feat HEADFLUX, Slack, Residents & Guests 11-4am £4/5The West Hill L’Amour Electro-nique synth sounds & French pop 9-3am £freeWestern Front Dj’s playing House, Electro, Funk and Breaks 9-2am £freeWhite Rabbit The Rabbit Rabbit Rabbit Djs 8pm Start

SUNDAY 29TH Belushi’s Open Mic Session 8.30-midnight £freeBelushi’s below Latin ses-sions Salsa & Samba ladies free b4 11The Black Lion Dubrockerslive Dub, Reggae, Ska + Funk night 6pm £free happy hour till 9The Brunswick Full Circle Live Music 8pm £7/£5Coalition Frequency house night 11-4am £10Concorde2 One Hundred Art-

ists for World Aids Day Featuring an Art Exhibition, DJs, Live Enter-tainment and a whole lot more, all profi ts will be donated to the Sussex Beacon 4pm £3 on the doorThe Druids BOOM(ting) The Luxton Brothers - Reggae/Hiphop/Drum and Bass/Dubstep 10pm £freeDuke of Beaufort Beaufort Blues Club 2-7pm £freeFiddlers Sham-Rock open night legendary, brilliant, Guinness-sod-den 9pm £freeThe Hamptons Retro Sunday Roasts and old skool tunes ending the week in style! Honey Club Spectrum 10.30pm-2.30am £2 b4 mid-night / £3 after with a Free shot on entry

Hope Two Ticks Promotions present: A night of live music from ‘Marvin’s Revolt’, ‘Blitz Kids’, ‘Cuba Cuba’ + more £4advKomedia The Maydays – Ar-gus! The Musical 8pm £7/5The latest Music Bar Bob Cheevers + Dominic Finley Emmy winning songwriter playing rootsy, blues tinged and beautifully melodic music Doors 8pm £8/7The Marlborough (Theatre upstairs) Dr Sketchy’s Art Cabaret Burlesque interactive life drawing 8pmPitcher & Piano Unfunkinbe-lievable: All pints £1.85, Vodka and Mixer £2, Selected cocktails 2-4-1 Prince Albert The Skints + The Junk + T.B.C 7pmRed Rooms Psychedelic Sunday Afternoon The Sumerian Kyngs 2-5pm £freeRikiTiks Rarekind Records Sunday Session funk & soul rarities from past & present 10-2amThe Victory Social Poker Night 7pm £1Volunteer Pub (Lewes) Shauna Parker & the Saloon Bar Band + Three Chords & the Truth Country,Americana + Western Swing 4pm £freeWhite Rabbit Jazz Sundays 3pm startXuma Jazz 8-10pm

MONDAY 30TH

Ancient Mariner Quiz night 8pm £1Belushi’s Quiz night 8.30-11pm £freeBelushi’s below Industry Night party tunes 9-2am £freeThe Black Lion Happy Mon-days Live music 6pm £free happy hour all nightThe Brunswick Acting Classes Theatre 10.30am & 7.30pm 7The Brunswick St Andrew’s Day Celebration Live Music 8pm £tbcCoalition Trash Mondays Stu-dent night 10.30-3.30am £free b411Concorde2 We Are The Ocean rock music + Hexes + The Amity Af-fl iction 7.30pm £8.50 + bf in advDuke of Beaufort free pool 8pmEasy Bar Social Poker 8pm £5 all inFountain Head Quiz with Char-lotte questions, singing rounds + playdough! 8pm £1Funky Buddah Mashed up 11-3am £2/3 (£free b4 12)

Honey Club ‘DETENTION’ -£FREE to everyone before midnight / £2 UBSU / £3 Others after.10.30pm-2.30amHope The H’Open Mic 8.30pm £freeJuggler AKL open mic 8-1 3freeKulture U Dirty Stop Out buy one drink get two drinks free all night 7-3am £3The latest Music Bar Break-through with Rough Trade Djs + live acts Doors 8pm Starts 8.30pm £5/£4 nusLife Stampede Student night 10.30-2.30am NUS £free/£2The Marlborough Free Pool lunch-closePitcher & Piano Unfunkinbe-lievable: All pints £1.85, Vodka and Mixer £2, Selected cocktails 2-4-1 Prince Albert Wasp Factory, Modern Fighting Vehicles+ Aspel Orchid+ Lewis Hoadly, Jason Barker 7pmThomas Kemp Superbang Quiz/games night 9pm £freeVolks BIG T presents Strictly Reg-gae Dancehall Bashment 10-Late £5/£4 cheap drinksXuma Cheese and Wine 8-cl +

Page 47: November edition of BN1 Magazine

1 Lacking in confi dence (5) 4 Hold fi rmly (5) 7 Auricle (3) 8 Flax (5) 9 Discharge (5) 10 Division of an ocean (3) 11 Amphibian (4) 12 To say again (4) 17 Green seed used for food (3) 18 Dwelling (5) 19 Prevail (5) 20 Spark (3) 21 Smash (5) 22 Therefore (5)

1 Natural abiliti es (6) 2 Construct (11) 3 Impenetrable (5) 4 Relati vely large (5) 5 Employment request (11) 6 Gives (4) 13 Colour (6) 14 Talk (5) 15 Walk with a stride (5) 16 Depict (4)

Answers on page 28

Quick Crossword

The Objecti ve is to fi ll a 9 x 9 grid so that each column, each row, and each of the nine 3 x 3 boxes contains the digits from 1 to 9 only one ti me each

PuzzlesSUDOKU

EASY HARD

43

Across

Down

Page 48: November edition of BN1 Magazine