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Was the famous club's fate already sealed?

What happened at Islington Town Hall on Tuesday night (Sept 6th) was not a hearing, for you cannot hear when you refuse to listen —...

Sampa the Great

'Let Me Be Great' is taken from Sampa the Great's acclaimed sophomore album, 'As Above, So Below'

Sampa the Great has shared a video for her ‘Let Me Be Great’ single, which features Beninese icon Angélique Kidjo. Directed by Pussy Krew, the...

January’s Cheeky Bubblers...

Morgan
Fiercely low-slung tech

Morgan is the Australia-born, Barcelona-based selector that first came on to DJ Mag’s radar with her ‘The Queens EP’ on Sunday...

The set took place in association with Neversea festival, which “aims to become the world's first music festival powered almost entirely by green energy” by...

A DJ has performed on top of a wind turbine for the first time ever.

Alex Parker, who also performed on the main stage at...

Position: 12
Movement:   6
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Position: 72
new entry

Best of North America 2018

Claude VonStroke founded his Bay Area house label in 2005, just a few years before the EDM virus infected seemingly every label and producer in...

Position: 9
Movement:   2

Midlands newcomers reveal an impressive Halloween line-up

After the roaring success of their Spring Festival in March, Outbreak returns to the Ricoh Arena in Coventry for two days of unadulterated partying.

With...

Position: 84
Movement:   7

Morgan Geist returns to his original house music inspiration.

Best known as one half of nu disco/deep house duo Metro Area, Morgan Geist's new moniker — Storm Queen — is about to have a bona-fide chart hit with the previously released 'Look Right Through'. The track has had a long gestation period: produced with singer Damon C. Scott, who shot to prominence for being filmed singing on the NYC subway, it was signed to Defected at the end of last year and the MK dub became an anthem in Ibiza and at many festivals over the summer just gone.

Where does a string of venue closures leave the capital?

The abrupt news of the closure of London's Cable at the hand of Network Rail repossession and plans for redevelopment sent shockwaves across the capital this May. Coming just two months after the dramatic closure of 93 Feet East and during the midst of an ongoing wrangle between private property developers and Ministry Of Sound, it's left London's clubs lined up a lot like sitting ducks, prompting clubbers to ask a flurry of pressing questions.