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Archive

Fri 16 Sep: Knees Up presents Trousers Down

August 22, 2016 admin
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Knees Up taking those trousers down.. After drinking in those rays on the rooftop, 16th September sees us deliver a friends and family special as we welcome our good pals Mavrik DJs into the fray. We are all set for an after hours session in the intimate VFD, a very cheeky little underground space with limited capacity. When we say limited we do mean limited - should be no more than 100 deviants down there so don't sleep on those £5 tickets.

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Mavrik are a Leeds to London based collective of vinyl lovers writing some excellent music related material by day (http://mavrikmusic.com/) and throwing frisky parties by night.

Starting off in Leeds before heading down this way these guys know how to get down. Their recent Afro disco jaunt w/ Mr Bongo down the road from VFD followed some classy nights in Leeds with Simian Mobile Disco and Ben Sun - they will bring a bag of tricks to the basement on 16th.

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As always Knees Up Resident Jack C features for what promises to be a small, naughty affair.

VFD 66 Stoke Newington Street 16th September 10pm - 3am

In All - Listings, What's On

Tues 13 Sep: Extra Second London - We Don't Need No Education

August 21, 2016 admin
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We're back! And this time it's (slightly more) personal. Extra Second London is a monthly poetry/debates night where we take an extra second to reflect on the ideas touched on by our featured poets. We give you, the lovely audience, a chance to make your voices heard - because poetry shouldn't be a spectator sport.

This month's theme will be Education. We'll be discussing our experiences with the education system, what we think is wrong with the current system and, most importantly, what a better system would look like.

We have three incredible featured perfomers this month, as well as an open mic! And once all that's out of the way we will open the floor for the main event - a round table audience discussion. We had some brilliant thought-provoking discussions at the last event and this one promises to be no different!

Doors open at 7.30, entry is £5 and the open mic sign up is first come first served at the door.

This month's features:

POETCURIOUS is a HipHop poet from north west London spitting political provocations for youths of all ages.

HANNAH GORDON is a Spoken Word Poet from North West London. She has featured at events across London and won the Boomtown festival slam 2014. Her poetry is honest and deeply rooted in her experiance. She is a primary school teacher and is looking forward to sharing some of her pieces around the theme of education.

THOMAS ‘GHETTOGEEK’ OWOO is a psychology and sociology teacher who, for last 13 years, has been using rap, spoken word and poetry to engage disaffected young people in north west London. He has been a manager of an alternative education seclusion unit and was an SEBD Advisory Teacher for Brent Council where he has trained schools, staff and pupils in finding ways to reduce exclusions from school. He is soon to take on the role of rap therapist and spoken word teacher in a primary school in London and is launching his poetry organisation called Ghettogeek Academy in September 2016. He is also the founder of the new creative arts YouTube channel called GhettogeekTV. http://tinyurl.com/Subscribe-To-GhettogeekTV . Ghettogeek only started performing within the London poetry circuit over the last year after his A-level sociology class (The #Sociology7) asked him to perform his teaching resource called “Sociology in Rap” out in the community. Since listening to them it has led to him also featuring at events at the Clapham Grand, Lyric Theatre, Nozstock Festival and the Edinburgh Fringe BBC Poetry Slam.

These three have all spent their fair share of time in and around the education system and are just as excited to share their views as we am to hear them! BE THERE!

In Listings, What's On

Weds 7 Sep: Spoken Word London

August 21, 2016 admin
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Spoken Word London is an open-mic poetry and performance night for anyone to come and join in, whether to speak or listen. Everyone who wants to speak gets five minutes, but no one gets more than five minutes. Speak in whichever format you want, sharing your own or others' work. Doors open 7.30pm, sign up for a slot 7.30-8pm, readings begin at 8pm.

Free entry, but please buy a drink (or more) at the bar.

***

Watch a brilliant short documentary upon SWL and some of its regular readers, made by Amelia Hazlitt, here: http://vimeo.com/103176010

And a feature length film of our first anniversary of SWL 'Anti-Hate', made by Timothy Lock, here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Dk-TXhERNHo You can also read an academic dissertation written on SWL here, by William Barns-Graham, on 'Lost in the Moment: Opening Up Utopian Performance With the Lost Generation at Spoken Word London':https://www.academia.edu/9916694/Lost_in_the_Moment_Opening_Up_Utopian_Performance_with_the_Lost_Generation_at_Spoken_Word_London

SWL host Patrick Cash talks about SWL and spoken word in London on Lunar Poetry: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hrwOqqiqeOk

SWL's second anniversary Anti-Hate is covered on Push Pony by Tracy Kawalik: http://pushpony.com/culture/word/

In Listings, What's On

Sat 3 Sep: HELP!!!!!

August 21, 2016 admin
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Do you need HELP!?!?!?! This Saturday at VFD we will be hosting the END OF THE WORLD!!.

Imagine if everyone else outside the 4 walls of VFD suddenly died? What would you do? How would we survive? These are the questions that HELP! hopes to answer  (seriously) through the spirit of dance, performance and alcohol-fuelled fun. We plan to figure this out together.

With your dystopian queen and host for the evening Ms Kevin Le Grand guiding you through the apocalypse. She will be bringing with her the comedy talents of Ms Emily Pope who will be asking the question 'is a queer end of the world really so bad?'.

We will then dance the night away with the DJ stylings of Josh Quentin as we twirl our way into the new world.

ALSO: there will be a prize given to the best end-of-the-world couture, so dress to DESTROY

MORE DETAILS TO BE ANNOUNCED VERY SOON

THE FINAL COUNTDOWN BEGINS NOW

£5 ENTRY ALL NIGHT

In Listings, What's On

Fri 2 Sep: Film night & party

August 21, 2016 admin
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The third in VFD’s new series of film nights looking at various relevant social & cultural issues. On the 2nd of September we will be looking at the mainstream media’s portrayal of Brexit voters & its influence over the masses. Screening on the night will be Sheena Sumaria's 'Why we voted leave: voices from northern England' (Guerrera Films - http://www.guerrerafilms.com/). The short follows social worker Sheena Moore in her hometown, the ex-mining village of Stainforth, as she goes round the village asking people how they voted & why. What we see isn’t a town full of bigoted, uneducated idiots, but real people that have been neglected by a broken system & used their democratic power to impose change.

In contrary to this we will show a couple of clips from popular media outlets which depict those who voted to leave as small minded & bigoted white people. Do these organisations go in with an agenda & by focusing on a minority skew the perception of their audience? In a Kardashian-worshipping, Snapchat-obsessed, narcissistic culture, are popular news outlets the new opium of the masses? Come to VFD to find out (obviously).

Special guests:

Sheena Sumaria (Guerrera Films) & more TBA

Doors open at 8pm, screening at 8.30pm.

FOLLOWED BY A PARTY FOR THE REFUGEE COMMUNITY KITCHEN

11pm - 3am.

With:

PersianPins (11-12) UNITI --- https://soundcloud.com/uniti (12-1) Intentionally Cold --- https://soundcloud.com/intentionallycold (1-2) Infernal Butcheress (2-3)

£3 before 11pm, £5 after.

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Sun 28 Aug: Sunday Funday error 404_Bank Holiday Meltdown

August 9, 2016 admin
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This is an automatic message. Error 404_ file not found. To report problem enter VFD code 28_8_16@2100h for reboot sequence. Here to celebrate the final summer bank holiday the only way they know how are London's most determined band of party cephalopods with another late-night-indoor-tough-murder-come-hipster-birthing-ceremony otherwise known as SUNDAY~FUNDAY!!!!

Bringing together for one night some of London's finest FUN-meisters for a special bank holiday knees up, SUNDAY~FUNDAY smashes together crazy music makers with infamous performers and party~runners, filling legendary queer basement VFD with music, colour, donuts and a lot of laughs!

To celebrate high~summer we'll be shorting our systems, frazzling our processors and glitching all over the shop. Robotmalfunction meets techmagedon. A night of complete system failure. Refresh, restart, reboot and maybe even total-meltdown. error_404_ is here to help you get to the root of your problem and delete any corrupted files in your harddrive. We've installed 4 times the amount of RAM, and cleared out space for more data than ever. So come and climb into the glitch with us, surrender your feeble organic bodies to our digital dismantling!

DJs will be throwing you from genre to genre, stopping only for our now infamous late~night~drag~show headed by none other than the bearded Claudia Winkleman of East London, Maxi More.

Doors open from 9. We will be open extra late! Once we're full, we're full so get there early to avoid disappointment!

£5 before 11PM, £7 after.

Most recently described by the Duchess of Kent as "...more fun than one can shake a stick at".

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Sat 27 Aug: Straight Nasty Bank Holiday Weekender

August 9, 2016 admin
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“We’ll offer you 100% of the party, but we want 33% of your bank holiday.” – Deborah Meaden Debbie’s taking a night off from rubbing her fingers together to celebrate the BANK HOLIDAY the only way she knows how – cha-cha-sliding her way onto Drake’s controlla. Join her for THE NIGHT OF YOUR LIFE!

CLICK 'GOING' FOR £3 ENTRY ALL NIGHT

Straight Nasty's ICONIC playlist includes: Rachel Stevens ♥ Geri Haliwell ♥ Mis-Teeq ♥ Kelly Rowland ♥ Madonna ♥ Jennifer Lopez ♥ Kylie ♥ Aaliyah ♥ Cher Lloyd ♥ Sophie Ellis Bextor ♥ Cheryl Cole ♥ Eve ♥ Rihanna ♥ Cher ♥ Sugababes ♥ S Club 7 ♥ Aly & AJ ♥ Steps ♥ Diana Ross ♥ Backstreet Boys ♥ Peter Andre ♥ Nicki Minaj ♥ Cascada ♥ Gaga ♥ The First Wives Club Soundtrack ♥ Loreen ♥ Atomic Kitten ♥ Ariana Grande ♥ Mel C ♥ Mel B ♥ Victoria Beckham ♥ Emma Bunton ♥ Spice Girls ♥ Amerie ♥ Beyonce ♥ Althea and Donna ♥ Donna Summer ♥ Cheryl Lynn ♥ Billie Piper ♥ Janet Jackson ♥ Kelis ♥ Missy Elliott ♥ RuPaul ♥ Britney Spears ♥ Katy Perry ♥ Little Mix ♥ Shakira ♥ tATu ♥ Charli XCX ♥ Venga Boys ♥ Scissor Sisters ♥ Lil’ Kim ♥ Lady Sovereign ♥ Lily Allen ♥ Kevin Lyttle ♥ Selena Gomez ♥ B*Witched ♥ Khia ♥ Gloria Gaynor ♥ Christina Milian ♥ Wham! ♥ Olivia Newton John ♥ Dead or Alive ♥ Pet Shop Boys ♥ Gareth Gates B Sides (jokes) ♥ Alesha Dixon ♥ Aqua ♥ Azealia Banks ♥ Fergie ♥ Gwen Stefani ♥ Blondie ♥ Christina Aguilera ♥ Girls Aloud ♥ Destiny’s Child ♥ M.I.A ♥ Taylor Swift ♥ Holly Valance ♥ Shania Twain ♥ Dolly Parton + MORE CLASSIC HITS FROM THE BLITZ!

AUGUST 27th 10-3AM £3 FB guestlist / £5 VFD, 66 Stoke Newington Road

With resident DJs TR!NNY & $U$ANNAH (Debbie, Slagbox) SHY CHARLES (Clit Rock, Best City Fashion) JE M'APPELLE ROCHELLE & GG BEAR (Nancy's @ Dalston Superstore)

For updates and event photos be sure to 'like' STRAIGHT NASTY here: facebook.com/straightnastyclub

CHIC C'EST LA VIE!

In Listings, What's On

Q&A: Freak - a work in progress by Nathan Penlington

August 2, 2016 admin
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This week at VFD from Sunday, Fringe First award winner Nathan Penlington's new piece 'FREAK - A Work in Progress' will start a 3 night run. We caught up with the author and performer to discuss his latest work. Q: Hi Nathan, you describe yourself on your website as writer, performer and obsessive. what are your current obsessions?

A: Obsessiveness is a state which you become powerless to avoid. It is a way of being, not always in a positive sense, but I’ve learnt to generally syphon those traits into creating. Being obsessive also means I have an exhaustive approach to the gestation period. I’m a gatherer of things, ideas, and material – this new work is still in that stage of full immersion – so at the moment it is sideshow, circus, and carnival.

Q: Your previous show, Choose Your Own Documentary, was the recipient of a Fringe First in 2013. How did that feel, to be recognised by the world’s biggest arts festival? Does that kind of accolade make it easier to pursue subsequent work, in terms of funding etc?

A: It was a surprise, that’s for sure! Choose Your Own Documentary was hugely emotionally involving and, due to the interactive nature, technically complex. It was also largely a labour of love at the production stage for myself and the filmmakers. I think if you make anything with the intention of trying to win prizes, or gain funding, you are going about things the wrong way. But it always felt like a story that had to be told.

The stories behind Freak also feel to me like they have to be told, particularly in the current political climate. They’ve been gnawing at me for years while I’ve been trying to connect the dots, find a forgotten link here, or an obscure reference there. I wouldn’t say this new project so far has been easy, but I’ve been very lucky to receive awards from both Arts Council England and the Society of Authors to assist with research - which have been invaluable.

Q: 'Freak’ explores a true story of sideshow performers, reaching from depression era America, through the Ringling Bros and Barnum & Bailey Circus, the second world war, the phenomenon of Ripley’s Believe it or Not, and the burgeoning Civil rights movements of the '50s and ’60s. It is an exploration of difference, tolerance, and the lives of tattooed ladies, rubber-skinned men, fat women*, conjoined twins, and the 'world's strangest married couple’. Lives that turn the assumptions of exploitation and disability upside down. Where did the inspiration for this piece come from?

A: The odd and unusual are things that have always driven and delighted me, but the inspiration for this piece really came from my personal life. I’ve suffered from serious bouts of prolonged ill-health throughout my life, but it wasn’t until I turned 30 that I was finally diagnosed with Ehlers-Danlos – a condition that effects the elasticity of the body: its organs, ligaments, and skin. Researching the condition uncovered that for over 150 years certain performers with the same disorder had been exploiting it by performing as rubber skinned men and elastic women, and had successful careers as professional ‘Freaks’.

Talking about freak shows is always going to attract a certain level of controversy - it is an area still largely steeped in taboo - but further obsessive digging in old newspapers and obscure journals has unearthed personal lives of freak show performers that aren’t what we would assume. It is wanting to question those preconceived ideas, and explore how the concept of tolerance applies to wider society, that makes it feel like a worthwhile subject to pursue – particularly in a world that is becoming more and more divided.

Q: The 3-night run at VFD is billed as a 'work in progress’. What can the audience expect?

A: The piece for VFD will be a combination of film, live documentary storytelling, and - as it is only right I prove myself - some odd abilities of my own. The piece will have some loose ends, and might be a bit woolly, or scruffy in places, but what it lacks in finesse I hope it makes up for in oddness and surprising tenderness.

Q: Has the process of researching this piece changed any of your own attitudes?

A: Completely. It is difficult to shelve preconceived assumptions, expectations, and prejudices. I know this research isn’t finished, and even when it is, I expect putting the material in front of audiences will raise further questions that will need confronting. That tug between viewpoints is what I want this piece to ultimately engage with.

Q; In 5 words, why should people come and see FREAK?

A: Real people alive on stage

FREAK - A work in progress  Sun 7, Mon 8 & Tues 9 August 7.30pm 

In Q and A, What's On Tags Q&A

Q&A: Meet the creatives behind Spoken Word London

August 1, 2016 admin
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In advance of Spoken Word London's 3rd Anniversary special this week, we caught up with the creatives behind it all, Patrick Cash and Hannah Gordon, to pick their brains about this beautiful weekly happening! SWL's Patrick Cash

SWL's Hannah Gordon

Q: SWL is celebrating its 3rd birthday! How has the event evolved from infancy to its toddlerhood?

Patrick: Spoken Word London began in the summer of 2013. At our first event, there were about 10 people huddled into the corner of VFD, and since then it has grown to a thriving event boasting a beautiful community of words and rhythms: both at the night and online on our Facebook page. Hannah Gordon was one of our most committed regulars and I was honoured to have her join as co-host in January of this year, and her help and commitment has been invaluable! We’ve never been a night for “Hollywood poets” and have always stayed true to our equality ethos where everybody gets five minutes and nobody gets more than five minutes. The only time we have featured speakers is at our special events, and the open-mic is always at our heart.

Hannah: I came to SWL for the first time in January 2014, when the event had already been going for six months and it was really busy, diverse and often spectacular. It still is. I was completely blown away by the variety of readers and the talented writers sharing their work and the sense of community surrounding the night. In the last two and a half years that I've been part of the community at SWL and poetry scene in London, it has grown so much. I remember Pat saying at a night in March 2014 that the Facebook page had reached 1000 likes, it's now at close to 5000! Despite the changing faces of the readers, the night has retained its welcoming and engaging atmosphere, creating an inclusive, safe space for people to share and experiment with different styles of writing and performance.

Q: At VFD we are huge fans of artists like Kate Tempest and Saul Williams. Can you recommend other notable artists whose work you’d encourage people to seek out?

Patrick: Oh definitely Dean Atta, who’ll be doing a big event with us in October (more info on that coming soon!) and of course those awesome featured speakers taking part in our third anniversary event next week: Dean McKee, who sets the mic alight each time he speaks; Rachel Nwokoro, such an electric and beautifully worded poet; Alexander ‘Woody’ Woodward, a true gentleman and deep speaker of the scene; Iris Colomb, liquidly fluid and eloquent weaver of words; Felix, whose honesty will take your breath away; and Rebecca Cooney, sharing with you the spoken gold of her experience.

Hannah: I would encourage people to check out Liv Wynter who is a hugely talented writer, performer and activist and whose style is very much influenced by grime. I really enjoy her poem 'F#@kin Artists' which, along with her Lunar Podcast interview, makes for interesting listening.

Q: You’re strong on ‘anti-hate’ as a theme at your events, what impact do you think this has on the prevailing hate-fuelled narrative of society today? Can you cite an example where the power of spoken word has effected change in your experience?

Patrick: The entire ethos of the night is built around empathy: sharing words and experiences, and building a connection with others through the tools of speaking and listening. These tools seem so simple but their memory stretches back throughout human history: before language was written it was spoken; in the modern microphone within a basement there lies atavistic memories of tribal fires, the oral tradition of travelling bards, there’s Homer’s The Odyssey being passed from mouth to ear for years before it was ever written down. Whatever time period it happens in, truly listening to somebody else and understanding their lived experience can only enhance our feelings of shared humanity and emotional truth. It’s what the greatest art achieves. Therefore in a time so riveted by division, by ignorance, by fear, by prejudice, we want to celebrate that unifying power of the spoken word. And as for an example: the last three years of hosting Spoken Word London, undoubtedly! My view of the world has been invaluably enrichened, and changed.

Hannah: I think the anti-hate theme opens up discussions that serve as an antidote to the hate fuelled narratives we are seeing in society and the media. The nature of SWL allows for such a broad range of people to share their first hand experiences often of discrimination or expressing identities marginalised by society at large and this, I think, creates a deep sense of empathy . Like Kate Tempest says of poetry in general, that it's there for us at our most vulnerable, when we need to know that others have been there and felt this. SWL enables readers to express themselves and their experiences in a sometimes personal way and this can be transformative for both the reader and the listener.

Q: How will you be celebrating the 3rd anniversary of SWL? Have you got any surprises up your sleeve for the occasion?

Patrick: As described above, we’ve got six amazing featured poets speaking to the theme - although our open-mic is still open for all to sign up and speak, as always! And yes, Hannah and I have a little surprise up our sleeves for our performance… Athough I can’t give it away, haha.

Hannah: We will be celebrating by having some incredible feature poets alongside our usual open mic. I'm really looking forward to seeing all our features, especially Rachel Nwokoro, who is the current UK Slam Champion and Dean McKee who never fails to impress with his lyrical content and powerful delivery. Myself and Pat will be performing too, with a twist... But you'll have to be there on the night to find out what it is...

Q: What advice would you give aspiring writers / performers who have not yet taken the plunge and signed up for their 5 minutes on the mic?

Patrick: I guess the basest advice is: dive in, and sign up. You don’t have to be perfect, you don’t have to be polished. If you’re scared you’ll forget your words, read from a piece of paper - and have that piece of paper to hand if you’re reading from memory! There have been times when I was starting off where I’d be reciting from memory, I’d make eye contact with someone in the crowd, and suddenly there’d be this cosmic blast and all the words would go out of my head… If you have the poem with you, you can just refer to it and finish, which is better than walking off early. But definitely go for it: the more you put it off, the bigger the shadow looms in your mind, and what we’ve tried to do at Spoken Word London from the very start is provide a friendly, supportive night that means anybody can feel confident to get in front of our very, very bright light!

Hannah: I would say do it! It's an amazing feeling to perform at SWL and it's a great place to start out as the audience are supportive and once you're up there you usually can't see anyone due to the spotlight! I would also recommend reading one of my favourite books: ‘Letters to a Young Poet’ by R. M. Rilke, it’s full of advice for anyone, but especially for aspiring poets.

Spoken Word London 3rd Anniversary Special Wed 3 August Doors open 7.30pm / free entry

In Q and A, What's On Tags Q&A

Fri 26 Aug: Queer Litter

July 26, 2016 admin
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A new night of house music 'n' sh!t from Mitch Imeanit and special guest DJs. Only those who are house trained need apply.

Wipe your feet on the way out...

10pm - 3am

£3 < midnight > £5

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Sat 20 Aug: Burning Down The House

July 26, 2016 admin
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The city is crowdedMy friends are away And I'm on my own It's too hot to handle So I got to get up and go It's a cruel, (cruel), cruel summer Leaving me here on my own It's a cruel, (it's a cruel), cruel summer Now you're gone

- BANANARAMA, 1984 BDTH is back for its cruel summer special feat. a big fan to keep you cool, our flattering photographer, sweets, glitter and tunes to make you sweat.

'80s / NEW WAVE / DISCO / GLAM / SYNTHPOP

Expect to hear: BLONDIE / KATE BUSH / CHIC / MADONNA / DAVID BOWIE / THE SMITHS / TALKING HEADS / FLEETWOOD MAC / SALT N PEPA / PULP / THE SPECIALS / EURYTHMICS / THE SLITS / DIANA ROSS / SIOUXSIE & THE BANSHEES / THE CURE / PATTI SMITH / THE HUMAN LEAGUE / INXS / EARTH, WIND AND FIRE / BUZZCOCKS / IGGY POP / PIXIES / TOM TOM CLUB / BANANARAMA / DEPECHE MODE / NEW ORDER / JOY DIVISION / KC & THE SUNSHINE BAND / MADNESS / VISAGE / GRACE JONES / PRINCE & MORE!

WHAT? BURNING DOWN THE HOUSE

WHEN? 10PM-3AM Saturday 20th August

WHERE? VFD, 66 Stoke Newington Road

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Thu 18 Aug: Pakeezah

July 26, 2016 admin
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KIM HOWELLS & RYAN LANJI INVITE YOU TO CELEBRATE THEIR #MAJE& #FRESH JOINT BIRTHDAY 18th AUGUST 2016 9PM - 1AM STRICTLY INVITE ONLY! PLEASE RSVP TO >> MAJEFRESHPARTY@GMAIL.COM <<

**PASSWORD WILL BE GIVEN FOR ENTRY 24 HOURS BEFORE THE PARTY **

HOSTED BY: PAKEEZAH (DALSTON'S FIRST BOLLLYWOOD / RNB NIGHT)

BOLLYWOOD | HIP HOP | BHANGRA | RNB | GARAGE

DJ SETS BY: RYAN LANJI LIL INDIA (FROM JALOOS FAME IN VANCOUVER, CANADA) TRU BLU

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Wed 17 Aug: Spoken Word London

July 26, 2016 admin
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Now on the 1st and 3rd Wednesday of each month, Spoken Word London is an open-mic poetry and performance night for anyone to come and join in, whether to speak or listen. Everyone who wants to speak gets five minutes, but no one gets more than five minutes. Speak in whichever format you want, sharing your own or others' work. Doors open 7.30pm, sign up for a slot 7.30-8pm, readings begin at 8pm.

Free entry, but please buy a drink (or more) at the bar.

***

Watch: a brilliant short documentary upon SWL and some of its regular readers, made by Amelia Hazlitt, here

a feature length film of our first anniversary of SWL 'Anti-Hate', made by Timothy Lock, here You can also read an academic dissertation written on SWL here, by William Barns-Graham, on 'Lost in the Moment: Opening Up Utopian Performance With the Lost Generation at Spoken Word London'

SWL host Patrick Cash talks about SWL and spoken word in London on Lunar Poetry

SWL's second anniversary Anti-Hate is covered on Push Pony by Tracy Kawalik

In Listings, What's On

Q&A: Tara Fleur - Woman of Bones

July 26, 2016 admin
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Host of VFD's S.E.X. Erotic Salon, visual artist, writer and performance poet Tara Fleur - Woman of Bones took a little time out from f*cking up the system to answer some of our questions... Q: Tara, you’ve been part of the VFD family for a while. We’ve known you primarily as a writer and performance poet, but we just discovered you’re a visual artist too. A true polymath. What does being an artist mean to you, especially in the current climate of political and global chaos:

A: Yes, I guess I am a polymath. But I see no distinction between writing, painting or digital art. They are my artistic pallete, my creative tools that combine my desire to dissect visually and verbally my complete contempt and resistance to a world falling apart at the seams. Being an artist is not just a matter of creating for me, it is in a bizarre way my own little revolution against the system that would love for me to put down my paintbrushes and my pens, pull up my knickers and my socks… pick up a tube map that leads me nowhere other than a dead end job. I am agitprop… agitprop is me.

Q: Your art takes many forms and you create in many mediums, can you tell us about the amazing digital project you’re working on currently, which you’ve sneak-peaked on Facebook recently?

A: I have become increasingly interested in Agitprop (political art). I have been exploring this genre in my writing, but felt that I could achieve stronger reactions (Reaction is very important to my art practice) if I were to explore agitprop visually. I studied Digital Art at art school, it’s always been part of my pallete, but now it has become even more important as a social -political commentary. The Digital Art I am now exploring is pure agitprop and I am loving the process and the results. The style of these new pieces very much compliments my writing, the brashness of my performances and the boldness of my paintings. They are all part of one body of work, that body being Tara Fleur-Woman of Bones.

Q: You host the monthly ’S.E.X. Erotic Salon’ nights here at VFD, can you describe what goes on at these nights for the uninitiated?

A: Yeah sure. S.E.X is a safe, censorship free (within an artistic debate) erotic salon where writers, artists, performers can explore without worry of being banned or negated, erotica within their art practice. It is a very welcoming environment with a truly open and accepting audience. Visually I see S.E.X nights at VFD as a red light district for the arts rather than for solicitation. What goes on there? Well colourful, provocative, explicit, thought provoking, dramatic and fascinating works by some of the best poets, spoken word artists and performers London has to offer.

Q: Which artists inspire, or have inspired, you in your work?

A: Gosh so many artists have inspired me. I have been in love with the arts from childhood. I guess to name a few I would have to say ‘The Sex Pistols’ and punk. John Cooper Clarke. Anne Sexton. Sarah Lucas. Beth B. Louise Bourgeois. Rubens. Bosch …. and so many more. Anyone whose work challenges not only in their art but the artists who made them. This is important to me… The Artist as the ultimate work of art.

Q: A lot of your writing riffs on the female experience of sex and sexuality, is this something you consciously write about in order to blast remaining mainstream taboos around female sexual expression?

A: Yes, definitely. I see myself as part of the sex positive feminist movement. Fighting against the rigidity of historical feminism and a society that still feels so uncomfortable and challenged by women who see sexuality as an important form of expression within their art practice. If we can explore love, death, emotions, why the fuck shouldn’t we explore sex within our art.

Q: If you have anyone from history to present day, fictional or real, in the S.E.X. Salon, who would you choose and why?

A: Oh gosh again so many. But I think I would love to have Annie Sprinkle come and perform her public cervix piece (a nom de porn in honour of urolagnia) or John Courts performance ‘The anus paintings’

Q: Tell us in 5 words, why people should come to your next event? A: Because S.E.X is art personified.

In Q and A, What's On Tags Q&A

Q&A: Dirtbox

July 25, 2016 admin
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One of VFD's most iconic nights, Dirtbox, recently made its comeback, bringing with it lots of familiar faces and popper-scented memories of debauched days... We caught up with Dirtbox crew, Jos, Alex and Michael, for a Q&A.

Q: Dirtbox is the stuff on legends in VFD’s history. Can you recount where the inspiration, and the name, for the night came from?

A: When we first started talking about doing a night we very much wanted it to be a no-frills night with good music. We very much were inspired by gay discos from the 1970s and 1980s in terms of music with very sexy undertones but not overtly sexual (although a lot of things happened...). When it came to picking a name we were looking for something that we felt would be the embodiment of that sentiment and so settled on Dirtbox.

Q: Describe the sound of Dirtbox? A: It's evolved a lot since we started which was really eclectic from hiphouse to newbeat, but it's now really about modern deep house vibe interspersed with old rave classics

Q: What makes Dirtbox unique in terms of a clubbing experience? A: Dirtbox had a reputation as a no-holds-barred, anything-goes kind of night.

Q: What’s the most outrageous story from the original days of Dirtbox? A: Urm, probably that time that circle jerk happened on the dancefloor. It was just in time for Christmas. (That's the only thing I can remember anyway, too much poppers...).

Q: What made you decide to rebirth the night after its 2 year hiatus? A: When we started there wasn't much going on in Dalston, even Superstore hadn't opened. There was just fashion parties in Shoreditch but then it exploded over the years; there was so many parties it was time to take a break but everyone kept asking and asking us to do one again so we thought, why not?

Q: Do you think the clubbing landscape in Dalston has changed since the original nights? If so, what’s different / what do you miss? A: It's definitely changed a lot. When we first started back in 2009 there were only a handful of bars and not much else. It was also a lot less busy on weekend nights with mostly people from East London or those in the know coming to parties as it was a bit more of an effort to get there before the overground opened at Dalston Junction.

Q: In 5 words, tell us why we should come to the next instalment on Saturday 13th August? A: Poppers, sweat, men, sexy times and more poppers.

DIRTBOX is back: Sat 13 Aug from 10pm.

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Tue 16 Aug: Extra Second London

July 19, 2016 admin
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Extra Second London is a new monthly poetry/debate night where we take an extra second to reflect on the ideas touched on by our featured poets. We give you, the lovely audience, a chance to make your voices heard - because poetry shouldn't just be a spectator sport. This month's theme is: The Future of British Politics.

With the Tories taking a sharp turn to the right, Labour seemingly on the verge being torn apart, the rise of UKIP, the possibility of another Scottish referendum and the small matter of an EU exit to negotiate, our political system seems to be approaching a turning point. So where do we go from here? Come along and have your say.

We have 4 wonderful featured performers this month as well as an OPEN MIC! If you'd like to perform we ask that you keep it topical, but it is a free county (for now...).

Sign up is on the door from 7.30.

Once all that poetry is out of the way we will open the floor for the main event - a roundtable audience discussion on the month's theme. Looking forward to hearing all your opinions on a topic that's sure to spark some heated debate.

This month's featured speakers:

JASON PILLEY has been performing poetry in London for the last four and a half years. In 2012 he won and lost various slams, he featured at all the best and most of the worst poetry-nights, he won the oh-so-prestigious "Farrago Zoo Awards" award for Best Debut Performance and was selected to take part in Apples & Snakes's "The Word's A Stage" programme. In 2013, in a futile but glorious attempt to position himself as the Humphry Osmond of poetry, he put together a group called The Mind Gang and organised open acid-trips at various unlikely sites: groups of poets took legal analogues of LSD in the British Museum, Kew Gardens, the Tate Modern, Durdle Door, etc. In 2014 he collaborated with the classical violinist Oktawia Petronella on the epic "The Invention Of Opera": having decided that pubs and bars and coffee-shops are the opposite of poetry, the pair performed their reimagining of the myth of Orpheus and Eurydice at graveyards and in churches, in art-galleries and on random buses, in a disused cavernous tunnel under the Thames and by the legal-graffiti wall in Leake Street... Also that year he handed out three million free copies of his one-off poetry-zine entitled "Uh! Uh! Uh! Uh! Uh! Uh! Uh!" 2015 was boring. So far in 2016 he's published a collection of his and his friends' poems called "SPIES 4 LIFE," he's distributed three hundred copies of that collection to random strangers as part of Intergalactic Poetry Day, and September will see the release of his new poetry-pamphlet, a depraved experiment entitled "SEEDPOETRY.".

MARC LIVINGSTONE is marxist poet from Glasgow. He writes poems slagging off capitalism in the vain hope that he will be appointed poet laureate after the revolution.

DEAN MCKEE is a spoken word performer based in west London, who has a taste for word play and imagery and uses these to create stories that will touch your very core. He uses honesty about his upbringing and childhood to give you a look into who he is and his almost rap like flow will mesmerise you. Definitely one to watch for the flow alone.

SAM BERKSON, aka 'Angry Sam', has been hosting and promoting live poetry events with Hammer & Tongue for ten years. He has won slams, performed in three continents and published two books of poetry with Influx Press. His debut, 'Life in Transit' was described as "a highlight of 2012" by cultural theorist Mark Fisher. He followed this with a commission for Fishbar photogallery of poems written around Dalston's Ridley Road market, composing the text of Lorenzo Vitturi's award winning photobook, Dalston Anatomy. His most recent collection, Settled Wanderers, records his experience living on the Western Saharan refugee camps and contains the first English translations of Saharawi poetry. Poet Chris Searle, writing in the journal Race & Class, said that the "poems carry a particular kind of powerful witness in their lyrical solidarity. They are narratives of empathy with the lives of people he encountered”. 

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Chloe Isadora: The Divine Feminine

July 19, 2016 admin
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Chloe Isadora will be channelling the divine feminine at her inaugural evening at VFD; her Full Moon Fire Ceremony is a ritualised release of energy, of things that are no longer serving us by offering them into the fire. This is an opportunity to let go and call in what we would like to receive for ourselves and the planet. Advance tickets available here.

Read more about Chloe's transition from the world of fashion to the world of the feminine divine here and here, and watch this space for more events with Chloe.

In Community, What's On Tags Magic

Sat 13 Aug: Dirtbox

July 5, 2016 admin
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Summer is here! Are you ready to get sweaty? Then cum and get hot and bothered at the Dirtbox den of manfun. Throw on your jockstraps and harnesses, slide down those steps into VFD's sleazepit and take a deep breath of amyl to loosen you up. Residents Gibson and The Duchess of Pork are joined by guest DJ Wes Baggaley, bringing you heavy loads of hiNRG, electro, new beat, house, italo and whatever else they fancy to get your treasure trails in a twist.

10pm - 3am

Read the Dirtbox crew's Q&A here.

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Fri 12 Aug: Dirty Diana

July 5, 2016 admin
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DIRTY DIANA"..an adoring dancing disco for homos and their homies.."

† Dirty news en route. SAVE THE DATE.

Meeeeanwhile, hit attending for £5 entry FRIDAY August 12th and ready yourself for all the LOVE with some unexpected surprises alongside your usual suspects and a li'l bit more..

Full line up and details to follow.. SPREAD. IT. _____________________________†

† Follow Us: #drtydna

Insta: http://instagram.com/drtydna

Tumblr: http://drtydna.tumblr.com/

Tweet: https://twitter.com/drtydna

Snapchat: drtydna

† ♥

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Sun 7 - Tues 9 Aug: FREAK

June 14, 2016 admin
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A work in progress by Nathan Penlington Supported by Arts Council England

Sunday 7 Aug, 7.30pm Monday 8 Aug, 7.30pm Tuesday 9 Aug, 7.30pm

FREAK is stranger than fiction – a true story that reaches from depression era America, through the Ringling Bros and Barnum & Bailey Circus, the second world war, the phenomenon of Ripley’s Believe it or Not, and the burgeoning civil rights movements of the '50s and '60s.

This work in progress is told through a combination of live documentary, storytelling and magic. Nathan follows freak shows from the peak of their popularity, through controversies of human rights, and visits the oldest living sideshow operator in the USA.

It is an exploration of difference, tolerance, and the lives of tattooed ladies, rubber-skinned men, fat women, conjoined twins, and the ‘world’s strangest married couple’. Lives that turn the assumptions of exploitation and disability upside down.

Audiences are invited to see FREAK by author and performer Nathan Penlington at an exciting stage of its development.

£3 entry

Praise for Nathan’s previous work: 

'Deeply nostalgic and dazzlingly modern’ - The Independent ‘A directive to live actively and make choices’ - The New York Times 'An awkward, unusual, tender story about what it is to be awkward and unusual’ - The Times 'That rare creature, a truly lovely show’ - Evening Standard

Biography

Nathan Penlington is a writer, performer and obsessive. He has performed his work in venues as diverse as New York’s Tribeca Film Festival, London’s Soho Theatre, Glasgow’s AyeWrite book festival, Chicago’s Drinking & Writing Festival, and has been broadcast on BBC Radio 1, 3, 4, 6music, and Australia's ABC.

Choose Your Own Documentary - a true story of obsession, childhood sweethearts, friendship, loss and adventure – won a Fringe First Award at the Edinburgh Festival 2013 for innovation and new writing.

The Boy in the Book, Nathan’s first work of non-fiction, was published by Headline in May 2014. An attempt at exhausting a place in London, a homage to the work of Georges Perec, was published by Burning Eye Books in October 2015.

He is a lifelong zine, fairground and magic fan.

NathanPenlington.com

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