Wednesday, February 04, 2009

Makes my head spin

I've been promising to write about the club for a while and here it is.
It was Headspin's 11th birthday last weekend, on January 24th. A quite scary figure that I never thought we would reach. I was just 22 when I started the gig and would have been happy for it to last five or six years. I think it must be a bit like how you count a dog's age, though maybe not quite multiplied by seven. In club terms we're now surely beyond middle age and approaching retirement, so multiply by a factor of 5 and we're about 55 now. That puts us up with a few legends of Edinburgh clubland, alongside the likes of Pure, Manga, and Tribal Function.
I make no secret of the fact that I've reached something of a crossroads with regards to my own feelings about the club. I feel I do the lion's share of the work in promoting the event and lay out any cash that needs to be spent, but when it comes to who gets to play, I take my turn just like everyone else and I will always be the last to get paid when we make any profit.
The reason I started the club in the first place was to give myself a chance to play out, to let people hear the music I thought was good enough to play loud and dance to. Somehow recently it has turned round to being that everyone must get the same chance to play and I have to wait my turn like a Muscovite standing in a queue for a loaf of bread. I don't want to be a Nazi about it and insist that I always play at peak time or anything like that, but the style of music I tend to play is undeniably suited to being played at that time.
So putting a lot of work in, investing time and money promoting the thing, only to get to play two half hour sets once a month and probably not get paid doesn't really seem worth it.
My feelings were brought into focus at the new year event when I got the distinct feeling that the club has run it's course; that what we had always done had ceased to be relevant, and our attempts at keeping up-to-date by playing the most up-front and recent tunes was a bit desperate and reactionary. We've never really been about playing the freshest, most recent tunes. We've always kept up to date with what's going on musically but we've never been a slave to the trends, fashions and fads of the day. We've done our own thing and it has been an almost timeless selection that spans decades but fits together like it was all made to be played together.
Over the past 18 months or so it has become a real problem getting the guest DJs we have wanted to play at the club. Deciding upon someone we are all happy with - who we think will play across the board enough to suit the music policy, but also being a big enough name to draw a good crowd, yet still sticking within the budget of what we could expect to recoup - has become more and more difficult and we're running out of names. When we do decide on someone the next challenge is trying to secure them for a reasonable price. This has proved really frustrating recently and I've been continually let down by agents who don't respond to my emails or feel they can get their artists more money elsewhere.
No disrespect to any of the guests we have had on over the past year and a half but many of them wouldn't have been first choice had we been able to secure the people we wanted. Others who we were sure would do well and were excited about have turned out to be less of a draw than we had expected and we've ended up either losing a bit of cash on it or just breaking even.
Obviously nothing can continue running at a loss so if things don't improve in that regard the decision will be made for me.
But I don't want you to think it is all negative; if it was it would be an easy decision to walk away and finish it up now.
On the plus side, we do have DJ Format booked in for February. He has been with us twice before and is a great DJ who is usually pretty popular. On top of that he is also a really sound guy, and probably one of only two or three guests I have booked who I would say have developed into being mates of mine. So I'm looking forward to hooking up with Format again and spending a bit of time with him.
At the birthday party at the end of last month it turned out to be a really good night as well. I enjoyed it much more than at new year. There was a good, happy, party vibe; the dancefloor stayed busy all night and everyone enjoyed themselves. We played a lot of classic tunes, not bothering with too much new stuff. We didn't stick to the rostered times but instead mixed it up with each of us putting a couple of tunes on then the next person jumping in. It left me feeling much more involved and raised the energy levels of the music. At the end someone finished off with Public Enemy's 'He Got Game'. Wouldn't have been my choice but I didn't put the last one on.


In the past couple of weeks one or two people have talked to me about how important they think Headspin is and how it is one of the only clubs of its type left and that Edinburgh needs it to continue. This wasn't anyone who knew that I was considering the future of the club but still they were enthusing about it and talking about how good it was. Their enthusiasm made me feel a bit better about things, but I wish more of the clubbing population shared those positive feelings and enthusiasm.
I don't want our audience to become apathetic and Headspin to fade away, tarnishing the memory of what it once was. If I feel that is happening I will have to pull the plug.

6 comments:

naldo said...

Keep yer mitt off that chain, pal. Pull nae plugs please.

Headspin is one of the few remaining clubs which caters for people who don't give a fuck how old or uncool they are, they just wanna have fun. And as such, i'd like it to last forever.

I'll even chuck out the odd poster if that would help.

After the end of March, natch.

Gouranga!

naldo said...

PS hey, Al, how come you don't link to Fuzzy Logic?

Anonymous said...

Decent wee splaff Mr D. Generally, clubbing as we kent it seems to have been on a downward spiral for quite a few years now. There are a variety of things you could blame this on, loss of 'underground' venues, the 'George Street' effect, the smoking ban, a changing drug culture amongst the bairns of today and I guess more recently the Credit Crunch (had to mention it, its getting the blame for everything else the noo). Sure there's plenty of other reasons but I'll leave it at that the now. Obviously the major headache for promoters like yersel is bums on seats (or should that be feet on dancefloors?). We all ken you guys love the music and putting the nights on but we also all ken you ain't a charity. I went to see Harri @ Cab Vol in December and you were lucky if there was a 100 people there. How did that make the Telefunken guys feel? No very good I guess. Sure they would've taken great satisfaction in having Scotlands best House DJ (in my opinion) on their flyer and playing in their club but at what price? A fairly big loss if you ask me. I dinne pretend to have the answers to the clubbing scenes problem; I dinne ken of any people who do have the answers; sometimes I even wonder if there are any answers. Times change, people change, habits change. Is this the beginning of the end for underground clubbing? Probably no but I canna see it ever returning to the heights it had previously reached.

As for Headspin, its a tricky subject to comment on but I'll do my best purely fae a punters point of view. Firstly, I'm no a fan of 30 minute DJ slots. I feel youz all have yer own unique styles and to chop and change DJs that often can lead to a somewhat disjointed night. Personally this is how I kinda felt about NYE. Got to agree wi you about the Birthday party tho, I had a right good night, the vibe seemed so different from NYE. I wasn't keeping track of who was playing when and how long for, all I kent was I had a right gid time. This was also due to the crowd, lots of old faces always appear at Birthdays, unfortunately a lot of these old faces are now married/parents/older'n'wiser and therefore ain't oot so much. As for the future of the club, not my place to say so I'm not gonna. If you do decide enough is enough who are we to argue, we've had a ball these last 11 years (only 9 for me tho I think?) and its about time we all grew up ......... ain't it??

Anonymous said...

Right!
Although this isn't really any surprise as Al has mentioned it previously it still is a bit hard subject to broach. We all agree that ye cannae have a 30 minute rotation of D.J's, unless it's billed as a 5 records each bonanza with a list of D.J's that would price ye out the game altogether. What I want fae Headspin isn't really gonna happen though... I do love Big Stevo's tunes and his energy but he makes a right gid warm up felly and an even better back room felly.
All the points that my learnered friend Scottie B made are true and right.
It isn't just Headspin that's suffering - In fact I'll wager that Headspin is still one of the most consistantly busy monthly's in the toon.

Guests are always a drain on resources and a big gamble that often doesn't pay out.The resident's nights are the ones the regulars look forward to and often the ones that the D.J's/promoters enjoy the most. But then again I right enjoy a good guest night so I've just contradicted masel... Baws.

Any club that has lasted the same length as The Heid has to continually reinvent itself or be sucked under into the growing abyss that is Edinburgh clubland. It'll be a sad day when The Heid hang's up it's gloves and moves on to that big party in the sky along with Pure and Tribal. Doesnae bare thinking aboot!

But there is always a light at the end of the tunnel and that light is called 'spin off'. Big Stevo already has a Heidspin spin off wey Mumbo Jumbo, Pure had Optimo (kinda), Taste has Monthly Taste and God knows how many spin off's big Stuart Duncan, Huggy, Yogi, Smokey and the Bandit - even the Blond 'Gayleage' Flash and Spider have had! In fact you could call it 'Headspin off'.
Mibbie no.

D.J's don't die - they might get a wee bit warped, cracked and fingered too much but with a wee bit of lovin and a good needle they can last a life time.
Unless they get AIDS...

I think that Al should ride the current wave and keep on trucking and spinning until his fingers bleed. But then I am a bit of a selfish bugger.

Anonymous said...

Nice rant and good comments. Might as well stick ma spoon in to.
Aye clubbing has changed as it always is, dips and highs lots of them. Peoples moods change even more with their life's and that effects it all. So being a club promoter is tough, especially through winter cos it is fucking miserable, so it is possibly even harder to convince peeps to trek up toon on a dark freezing night (me) Pretty sure things will change when the warmer weather arrives.
Loads o people work weird times an aw , which may effect crowds, as for tunes pretty sure people prefer a Dj to build a set as you do. Not to chop it around between you all, maybe a Dj cold have every odd headspin of given the ones left more time on their set.
Who knows what the answer is? Think i have missed he last 3, twice cos of work! And i miss it, I would agree that it is prob one of the most consistent in toon if no the best attended in these bad times.
Ride it out or have a holiday then resurrect it, sort it oot.

Al D said...

Thanks for your comments and support lads. Food for thought in there.
Scottie, I'm with you on the 30 minute set thing. I think it's got to be longer sets, either that or a mash-up of two or three tunes about. Maybe Cope is on to something and one of us should take the night off once in a while, giving the others more playing time.
Stevie, 'Spin Off' was the name of the night me and Dava did at the Cab on Wednesday nights until we got emptied from that just as it was starting to get busy.
I'd still like to do another night but I'm not sure I've got the energy and the willingness to take a risk building it up from scratch.
Don mate, apologies for not linking back to your page, that should be it sorted now.
Love and respect to ya all.