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Convergence @ The Fridge

Reported by Spacehog / Submitted 11-04-03 09:32

Mention Karim to some people and their minds immediately swell with blissful images of aural heaven, paradise and Nirvana. To others, the very idea of Karim conjures up thoughts of pneumatic drills, bleeding ears and incurable headaches. And that is what makes Karim stand out so much in our ‘hard dance’ scene today and that is what makes him great – either you LOVE his style, or you HATE it.

I have never heard anyone say “He’s alright” or, “I don’t really mind” when discussing a Karim set – there is no room for sitting on the fence when he sets foot in the DJ booth and the rolling basslines kick-off.

Take this conversation, for example, which I had overheard earlier in the night:

“Why is it that the hard stuff only sounds good when Karim plays it?”

“Magic!… You got a spare fag?"

Admittedly, it wasn’t a very long conversation, but in precision came truth.

Frantic have taken note of this, and while this edition of Convergence was to be a celebration of Karim, being shown up was the last thing on the minds of the other DJs playing there….



Convergence is, and always has been (as those who remember the events at Crash can testify to), one of Frantic’s eldest and best spin-off nights. The music is geared towards new releases and productions fresh on the acetate and generally with a harder edge. The line-up for this night – ‘The Harder They Come’ - was one of the more interesting and versatile to date, with a few of those playing not being able to claim regular, weekly appearances in London.

Guffy is a DJ who Frantic have been putting a lot of faith in recently, and his progress is something that I have kept my eyes (and ears) on. Brought in to give Frantic more options with the early time-slots in a night (and at last freeing up Steve Hill to get some late night action himself?), Guffy brings control and pace to his warm-up sets, which I for one, gladly welcome. His funky, groovy, riff-filled set at Convergence only confirmed why he has just been awarded with a Frantic residency.



Glasgow Superclub Inside Out is on the expansion up in the Scottish city with gigs now at the Glasgow Academy as well as The Arches, and with the likes of Fergie, M.I.K.E. (Push) and the mighty Tiesto having all played at recent events. It’s therefore good to see what they themselves have to offer, with ‘Inside Out’ resident Simon Foy taking over from Guffy, furthering Frantic’s effort to bring in to London talent that is rarely heard down here.

He opened with the awesome ‘Scratch ‘N’ Breaks’ mix of ‘The Sound’ by The Disco Brothers, and his set progressed a notch higher without yet hitting too much of the hard stuff. After a good helping of his set I decided it was time to go and shoehorn myself into Room 2 (formerly known as Le Café) in preparation for Karim: Episode One.

In the meantime, Donna Birt was halfway through her set in there and continuing in her rise in London’s hard dance scene, having already played the mainrooms at the Camden Palace and The Fridge, displaying a potential that matches her undoubted determination.



I immediately spied some familiar faces, the same ones that I always see ‘at the front’ whenever Karim is on. We were all already sweating anticipation as well as sweating generally in this broom-cupboard of a room, as Donna’s set made me wish I’d walked in for the beginning of it. Peaking just at the right time with some great current tunes as well as some classic oldies like her finale, ‘My Definition’ by DJ Pure – in her own words, “Something a bit filthy”.

Funnily enough, ‘Filthy’ is the most often quoted word that I have heard used to describe Karim’s music. Filthier than the lavatories of Cardboard City, you might say. I have no idea where this expression came from, or what it is supposed to actually imply, but it sounds just right. So here I was, getting down to some pure and utter filth as Karim blasted out his mix of ‘Let’s Rock’, ‘Black Dogs’, ‘Age of Love’ as well as his own ‘Cheap Rent’, ‘Begonia’ and that cranky ‘I Got the Power’ tune…



However, I must admit an act of high treason about 5 whole minutes before the end of his set – I left. This had nothing to do with the tunage, but all to do with the room it was being played in. I had my reservations about this being converted in to a second room for music when I first heard about the initial plans, and to be honest, now I’ve been in there a few times, I think it is a waste of time.

No air, poor sound quality, and so narrow that Jo Brand would barely be able to do a 360 degree turn, I don’t think I even breathed in any actual oxygen while I was in there either. With all that sweat, suffocation, being stamped on, elbowed and rubbed up against by soaking-wet, bare-chested blokes, I may as well have gone out for a Friday night at a Turkish sauna (Note: Surely that kind of fun is reserved for de-stressing during midweek?).

There are many people who enjoy that room and are glad that it can now be used for music. I also know that a club with more than one arena for music is commercially a lot more marketable, but I would be hard-pushed top say that the room ‘has potential’. Stepping back out in to the mainroom was like setting foot on another [oxygen filled] planet: Bring back Le Café!



The gorgeous fresh air that I was now inhaling initially made me think I was having a ‘giddy turn’. I was hearing some strange sounds and couldn’t quite relate them to the night I was at. Things like “Yo’ MC says ‘Anyone from London, England?’” and “Everybody say Ho!” kept bellowing from the speakers. Then I realised everyone else was hearing the same thing and all that chin-scratching around me was because Energy Dai was now playing the mainroom. By this time the music needed to be up a few gears, especially for a ‘Convergence’, but sadly it was a little too flat on this occasion.

The ever-reliable Phil Reynolds was up next before the main set of the night – the Karim and Paul Glazby B2B. Fans of these two were treated to this B2B combo only a couple of weeks previously at Riot! and were not left disappointed this time around either. Loads of old classics mixed in with brand new tracks from both men, culminating in RR Fierce’s ‘Yamamba’.

It was at this point that I also bumped into HarderFaster’s Editor-In-Chief by the bar (which, having been done-up, looks 100 times better), whom I was very surprised to see, as he had previously declared that he’d “rather spend the night washing his hair” than attend this Convergence. When I enquired as to what he thought of the music he gave the kind of smile that a lead actor of a play gives on stage midway through the key act just as he is about to immediately and unavoidably shit in his pants. Like I said, Karim isn’t everyone’s cup of chai.

BK closed the evening with a great set which showcased a lot of new work. I have yet to identify which of his new tunes is the follow-up to ‘Revolution’ so cannot give an opinion on whether it is “Even better” or “Cheesy nonsense made with Radio 1 in mind” – two opinions I have had expressed to me with equal glee. I’m guessing it has elements of both.



An event that delivered what it promised - a DJ line-up that was fresh and different as much as it was solid and trustworthy. Don't go expecting extravagant décor, or people to be handing out free bananas, but if the names on the flyer gets your juices flowing and puts you in the mood for some no-nonsense stomping, then Convergence is a party that will more than satisfy you.


With thanks to AbFab for the use of his photos Thumbs up

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Other Features By Spacehog:
KARIM - Exclusive Interview!
becomeone NYE @ (Sub) Logic
Tasty presents Total Recall 2 @ The Fridge
Riot! @ The End
The views and opinions expressed in this review are strictly those of the author only for which HarderFaster will not be held responsible or liable.
Comments:

From: tom on 11th Apr 2003 10:05.25
I never said anything of the sort Roll eyes (sarcastic) Bloody artistic license Wink

From: Spacehog on 11th Apr 2003 13:37.51
Ahh yes, i remember... you said you'd rather "spend the night plucking your chest hair than go to Convergence". Sorry about that, my mistake Wink

From: tom on 11th Apr 2003 18:11.19
Yeah well I was shaved as smooth as a new born baby that night so what choice did I have?

From: Luckyfuka on 12th Apr 2003 08:09.56
Good review - gotta disagree with ya on the second room tho, its pretty damn good in there.

From: girth on 14th Apr 2003 11:27.48
create review s.h. and you're right about Mr Karim- not everyone's choice of musak but great night all the same. shame about the bouncers trying to take my digital camera off me (to be left at reception!)- anyone else had this 'new policy' enforced on them?

From: bunny on 14th Apr 2003 23:22.16
Wicked review GD + next time I hear BK's new one being played out I'll try + find you. It's not an immediate hit like Revolution but a real grower.

Girth - this happens a lot, best thing is to put it somewhere discreet + hope the bouncers don't find it.

From: BottleofWater on 16th Apr 2003 09:54.07
Laughs out loud @ tom.

From: tenthInsight on 17th Apr 2003 07:57.21
KARIM is god!!!
'nuff said...
Smile

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