When is clubland 21 coming out




















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Police had compiled figures that showed during there were 1, violent or sexual crimes in Norwich city centre, of which - or Between and in Norwich city centre in there were reported crimes, of which - or Equivalent figures for show reported violent and sexual crimes, with - or The city council is proposing a cumulative impact policy under which any application would be considered only if it was shown it would not add to the crime problem.

Gail Harris, responsible for customer services at Norwich City Council, said licence applicants in the clubland area would have to explain how they would avoid contributing to existing crime levels.

Mr De'Ath said club and pub owners worked with taxi firms and transport companies in to foster a safe and friendly environment. CCTV of street violence released. Will Harold, Director of innovative club music promoter London Warehouse Events LWE , acknowledges the financial and legislative pressures promoters are under in Costs go up. And in these competitive times, when dance music is huge everywhere, so do DJ fees.

Tighter regulations and a competitive marketplace start to squeeze the margins. That said could clubs be doing more to make their spaces engaging whatever government, economy, technology or society throws at them? Stealth, also within the city, followed; then global dance brand Renaissance. As soon as one party is done people are immediately asking about where the next venues are going to be!

So what exactly is this creative rejection of the archetypal Saturday night dancefloor doing for LWE and, for that matter, clubland? The migration away from traditional clubs is also taking ravers to festivals, Haslam points out. Unlike the Nineties and mid-Noughties, people have a wide array of options beyond their local nightclub these days. However, Harold suggests that even the festival landscape is in danger of becoming sterile.

But that is not to say it is in trouble; far from it. Liverpool-based promoters Freeze have been pushing boundaries by hosting events in cathedrals, churches bombed out during World War 2 and even the Williamson Tunnels — an English Heritage-protected labyrinth of underground tunnels built, randomly, by eccentric 19 th century philanthropist Joseph Williamson.

Freeze is 10 this year and still going strong. In Leeds and Manchester, meanwhile, Hugo Monypenny has built a name for himself via house and techno night Selective Hearing, enticing the likes of Ben Klock and Robert Hood to spaces such as garages, industrial estates and disused furniture warehouses.

People are drawn away from the big events because there is no intimacy there. There is evidence of the same trend overseas. Renowned label and collective Innervisions, helmed by Dixon and Ame, is generating plenty of interest by promoting radical party concept Lost In A Moment.

The concept, so far, has proven both inspirational and financially stressful. Parties planned in Amsterdam and Barcelona this summer were cancelled late in the day owing to local government interference.



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