| Biography
I feel love. I feel it every time I walk through
these doors. I lost myself here almost a decade
ago, and things have never been the same since.
Has it really been ten years? It seems a lot longer.
It seems like yesterday.
It was the summer of 1995 when The Unabombers
first detonated their underground bomb, The Electric
Chair, in a sweaty basement below the pavements
of Manchester. In the decade since it’s
become the worst kept secret in the world of clubbing.
A mystic brew of house, disco, hip-hop, broken
beat, Latin, R&B, techno and northern sulphuric
soul. The heart of Mancunia, a fabled land where
everyone parties as one - strangers and soul mates,
straights and gays, north and south, students
and scallies. Anyone can open a club. Not everyone
can open hearts and minds.
The chair outgrew its original home and moved
onto a bigger basement club, The Music Box, but
somehow the tricky alchemists Luke and Justin
Unabomber retained the chemistry and the vibe.
Over the years, I’ve had the time of my
life with the best bunch of friends there, and
woken up not being able to remember a thing. I’ve
also danced all night on my own and remembered
every minute.
I’ve seen clubbing legends like Joe Claussell,
Laurent Garnier and Francois Kevorkian blown away
by the energy and the soul of the club. Joe was
almost evangelical afterwards, returning to NYC
enthusing about the ‘power and the beauty
of the spiritual energy that was at that party’.
This is a club to hold close to your heart. A
club without a membership, but a club where you
can belong. A club to treasure. A club I will
tell my grandchildren about. A club I should have
told my grandparents about. A club which has changed
lives. A club that’s still changing lives.
A club where the weak become heroes and everybody
feels love.
Electric souls forever.
Luke Bainbrige (Observer Monthly)
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