ABOUT
Bugged Out is an all night electro/techno party that takes place
at The End in London, Sankeys in Manchester and The Loft in Barcelona.
We also visit other clubs in the UK and around the world. We are
over 12 years old (which in club years means we can grow a nice moustache)
and had LFO at our first party in November 1994 and have had everyone
from Daft Punk, Green Velvet, The Chemical Brothers, Miss Kittin,
Ellen Allien, Tiga to Vitalic over the years. We have also put some
acclaimed compilations out
by Erol Alkan, Damian Lazarus and Miss
Kittin and have a 12" and download label with the most recent
releases from Gucci Soundsystem and JoJo De Freq.

The first Bugged Out! was on Friday November 25th 1994 at Sankeys
Soap Manchester. It was a night with Warp records so LFO, Autechre
and Mark Broom were on the bill.
Bugged Out! evolved from the magazine Jockey Slut founded by Johnno
Burgess and Paul Benney who hooked up with the owner of Sankeys Soap
Andrew Spiro.
The Chemical Brothers played in April 1995 and jumped from playing
the 800 capacity Sankeys to the Hacienda in months. They came back
to play for a second time a year later though were billed as 'Very
Special Secret Guests Live and Direct From Planet Dust'.
Daft Punk played live at Sankeys in October 1995. Da Funk' was still
a cult hit at this point but you could see that armed with that,
'Rollin' and Scratchin' and 'Alive' they were going to be huge. The
masks, talking dogs and robots all followed.
Cajmere's first ever DJ gig in the UK was at Bugged Out in April
1997. When he returned to play live as Green Velvet we gave away
500 fun camera's at the door. 'Camera's ready prepare to flash...'
Top buddies Dave Clarke and DJ Hell both agreed to DJ in suits at
Sankeys in 1997. However Hell looked dapper in a burgundy number
but Clarke forgot his and wore t-shirt and jeans. Hell came back
for an International Deejay Gigolos night in October '97 bringing
Austrian artist Christopher Just whose 'I'm A Disco Dancer' we licenced
to Jockey Slut’s label Slut Trax. It went to 74 in the proper
charts!

In 1996 when Sankeys opened their second room the musical remit
widened from house and techno to drum'n'bass, big beat, trip hop
and whatever new genre was invented that week. The drum'n'bass nights
were massive with regular visits from Doc Scott, Ed Rush and first
paying gigs for Optical and his brother Matrix. Things got a bit
rum after a while as the Manchester gangs took an interest in the
night which pretty much ruined Sankeys Mark 1. Ed Rush had to be
walked to his car by security one night because he wouldn't let some
random MC plug his mic in.
Laurent Garnier
played live in April 1998.
Laurent's band featured
two chaps with Eiffell towers on their heads. The Sankeys ceiling
was a bit low though and they bent at the top.
Squarepusher has Djed at the club twice. He played upstairs in Sankeys
with Run DMC's 'Walk This Way' and '91 hardcore rave featuring in
his set. Swigging from his rider (a bottle of tequila) he plugged
in a mic and shouted 'C'mon You Cunts Let's Rave' which later became
a t-shirt. He also played a special acid set in Liverpool which he
demanded be entitled 'Squarepusher: I Will Always Be With You'.
When Sankeys Soap closed suddenly in 1998 we held a 'final' Bugged
Out at a Spanish restaurant called Balearica. Then we were approached
by Cream to host the monthly allnighter at the end of each month
in Liverpool. We had reservations at first as Cream was a populist
club. Their venue, though, was perfect - warehouse-like with an amazing
sound system and three rooms which meant we could widen the musical
remit to reflect other areas of Jockey Slut. The first flyer featured
a bright yellow rubber duck. Christ knows why.

The fourth birthday on November 27th 1998 was special. Stardust's
'Music Sounds Better With You' had been the hit of the summer so
we tried to get Thomas Bangalter to DJ. The flyer's had to go off
without him though as we couldn't get a decision out of him in time.
Then, two weeks before the gig Bangalter agreed to play. His management
rang a day later to say that Guy-Man didn't want to miss out and
would we mind billing it as a Daft Punk set? Hmm, no we would not!
A week before the gig we received another call from the French. Thomas
would also like to play a live set from the booth too. So we had
Thomas playing 'Music Sounds Better With You' live from the booth
and then Daft Punk putting on Stevie Wonder's 'Happy Birthday'!
Bugged Out! went to Ibiza in the summer of 1999. We did the Saturday
night slot at Amnesia and for the first time ever the likes of Basement
Jaxx and Jeff Mills graced the island. Back then Ibiza was still
a cheese-fest. "Jeff Mills in Ibiza? Who cares?" said Muzik
magazine at the time yet Mills played our busiest night before 3,500
party people dropping soon-to-be-huge 'Knights of the Jaguar' and
Donna Summer's 'I Feel Love'. We lost a fortune out there though
as Saturday night is traditionally the changeover day when a lot
of Brits go home. The club was pretty busy every week but with the
Spanish island dwellers who got in for free. Bugger.
Badly Drawn Boy
played live at Nation in April 1999.
Armed with
only an acoustic guitar and a mic the Boy did good fending off DJ
Sneak's beats bleeding through from the main room.
The 5th birthday in Liverpool had a unique flyer. It was plain white
in homage to The Beatles white album. It was embossed with dots which
we told people was '5th birthday' in braille. It wasn't. It was just
a load of dots.
The It's Just A Big Disco slogan was a spin on Gatecrasher's It
Will Always Be With You. It was also inspired by a story we heard
about Elliot Eastwick who buzzed the door of the Hacienda, shouted
said phrase into the intercom at whoever answered and ran off.
November 17th 2000 was the date of the Bugged Out Weekender at Pontins
Holiday Camp, Prestatyn. The cast was beyond stellar: Underworld
and Reprazent live, The Chemical Brothers, Dave Clarke, Felix Da
Housecat, Green Velvet, Richie Hawtin, Carl Craig, DJ Hype, James
Lavelle, Jon Carter, Gilles Peterson, Roger Sanchez, Slam, Justin
Robertson, X Press 2, Lottie, Craig Richards, Yousef, Harvey, Mark
Rae, Jacques lu Cont, Mr Scruff, Bent, Rob da Bank...the list goes
on and on. Even Doves played an acoustic set in the pub run by the
Heavenly Social. Thing is only 1500 people (half the capacity) turned
up meaning that at best you were able to dance to the Chems without
being crushed or see the whites of Karl Hyde's eyes as he performed
but at worst there were sometimes only a handful of people dancing
in some of the rooms. Looking at the line-up it still makes us think,
'What the fuck happened there then?' But I guess Prestatyn in North
Wales was probably not the best choice, it was inflicted with biblical
weather in the weeks leading up to it (in fact it was almost cancelled
due to flooding). The train system was also fucked that month with
regular trips from London to the area taking nine hours. Still, there
were still a lot of good memories from it - the best being the spirit
of the people who did make the trip - with the NME summing it up
perfectly by calling it "a spiritual success". We take
solace in that when we recall that we lost our shirts (pants and
socks) that weekend...
Royksopp
played Nation in September 2001.
We put them on at 11.15
which was a bit early really. They were relative unknowns and not
quite as chilled out as the album suggested to us. They were rocking
out whilst people were still putting their coats in.
George Harrison died on the day of the 7th birthday in Liverpool.
Jon Carter made a detour en route to a second hand shop and picked
up a copy of 'All Things Must Pass' and played 'My Sweet Lord' at
the end. Not a dry eye in the house la.
Roots Manuva
played at Nation at our 7th birthday in November 2001
.
Rodney would later DJ at Bugged Out at The End in 2002 where at one
point a record ran out and there was silence as he had forgotten
to put another one on. He was much better when behind a mic.
Bugged Out hooked up with the Boutique in London for some memorable
parties at Fabric and Heaven in London from 1999-2001. Daft Punk,
Fatboy Slim, The Chemical Brothers and Felix Da Housecat all caused
roadblocks at these memorable events.

In November 2001 The Avalanches Show - Dexter Fabay and Robbie Chater
- came to the new look Sankeys where we held occasional parties.
The diminutive Aussies had to stand on crates of Red Bull to reach
the decks starting their show with calypso and moving through Dr
Dre, techno and Queen...
Bugged Out: Chilled Out ran on Sunday afternoons and on New Years
Day at the Social pub, Arlington Square in Islington, London since
the summer of 2001 til January 2004. Justin Robertson, Layo, FC Kahuna,
Tayo and Erol Alkan all played seated sets (well who wants to stand
up on a Sunday?). Erol used to play bird noise from a soundtrack
album inbetween his selections. He used the bird noise again at the
beginning of his Bugged In Selection.
T-shirts & banners we have known and loved: Bugger Off, C'mon
You Cunts Let's Rave (very limited), It's Just A Big Disco, It's
a War Out There, 666, Suck My Deck, Viva Acid House, Disco Very,
Weekender, Passion Is Not A Fashion.
Bugged Out have won two Muzik awards, Best UK club in The Face and
the Dancestar award for Best International Club.
The night has visited clubs across the UK and abroad and hosted
and programmed arenas at festivals including Snowbombing in Austria
and France, Creamfields in the UK and Argentina, Skolbeats in Brazil,
Planet Roxy in Czechoslovakia and Dance Valley in Holland.
DJ Hell's International Deejay Gigolo's showcase at Heaven in December
2001 was trailblazing. Hell played a three hour set of breaking hits
like 'Sunglasses At Night' and Crossover and Miss Kittin and The
Hacker played live. Kittin came on stage wrapped from head to toe
in swaddling bands, unbound she revealed a tight leather cat suit.
Erol Alkan's first Bugged Out appearance was at Fabric in the summer
of 2000 (first record was the instrumental of Massive Attack's 'Unfinished
Sympathy'). He was dead nervous to begin with but by the time he'd
finished he had a room full of converts asking, 'Who was that bloke
in the Batman t-shirt?'. His first appearances up north were memorable
too. In February 2002 he went on to a virtually empty room at Nation
in Liverpool. We left him to it for an hour and on returning Erol
had the room rammed and going nuts. He signed quite a few autographs
that night, mainly so people could find out who he was! The following
week the same thing happened upstairs at Sankeys Soap leaving the
crowd singing an impromptu version of the 'Batman' theme. Erol owns
four Batman t-shirts though doesn't wear any of them anymore
Vitalic
played his first three UK gigs for Bugged Out. When he
played The End in December 2002
he was best known for the heavy
metal techno of 'Le Roc' Vitalic also had a tune that started with
a drum beat that sounded not unlike Toni Basil's 1982 hit 'Mickey'
prompting the crowd to almost drown the French man out with 'Oh Mickey
you're so fine, you're so fine you blow my mind, hey Mickey!
Gonzales welcomed the New Year in in style at our New Years Eve
party at Ocean in 2002. In smoking jacket - and smoking a huge pyrotechnic
cigar - he played 'Auld Lang Syne' at a white grand piano, whilst
singer Feist handed out G shaped sparklers.
The then little known Scissor Sisters played at our last party in
Nation, Liverpool in October 2003. Everyone
went to dance to Green
Velvet in the main room leaving Jake Shears and co.
to perform in
front of about fifty people. Undeterred they played their
hearts
out, as if in front of a festival sized crowd and declared the night
the best of their tour. A few months later they sold out a much
bigger venue
on their own and gave a special thanks to, ‘The
Bugged Out Fifty!’
We first heard JoJo De Freq at Glastonbury in July 2003. Impressed
with her unique style we asked her to become a London resident the
following year. She released her debut single Make Some Noise on
Bugged Out recordings in the summer of 2006.
Mylo played a special gig at the Bugged Out 10th birthday party
at The End.
Rob Bright played The Pixies 'Here Comes Your Man' as
Myles (in inexplicable
Pokemon t-shirt) made his way through the
crowd to the stage. Their set
included a special version of Jean
Michel Jarre's 'Rendezvous' (rehearsed
only hours before) and visuals
from Phantom that featured photo's of the
Bugged Out promoters in
various states of disrepair over the years.
Mu was like "popcorn in a frying pan" (her description)
before Miss Kittin
at The End in March 2005. She endeared herself
to the crowd in more ways than one, with a
huge cheer going up when
she succeeded at a handstand after several failed
attempts. During
'Paris Hilton' she was joined on stage by a girl who had
made herself
up to look a bit like...Paris Hilton, much to Mu's surprise.
At Snowbombing 2006 2manydj’s headlined the Bugged Out street
party playing to over 2000 al fresco revellers. Being a ski resort
it was a bit nippy and David Dewaele had to play wearing gloves!
Didn’t seem to harm his mixing though. He later appeared playing
live with Nite Versions wearing a towel on his head. Must have been
that mountain weather.
For Tiga’s Sexor album launch party in 2006 we let the Canuck
curate the night. He chose Erol Alkan, 2manydj’s (under the
disguise Speculoos Dance Squad, named after a Belgian biscuit), Dangerous
Dan and DJ Damage. His brother Thomas Von Party and special guests
Altern 8 who inspired his hit ‘You’re Gonna Want Me’.
Erol curated the main room at The End in May to herald his 5th year
as London resident and chose Boys Noize, Switch and Arveene to play
alongside.
At
the 12th birthday Miss Kittin, Erol and JoJo were joined by Uffie
and Feadz. Uffie was to rap from atop a little podium positioned
next to beau Feadz who was in the dj booth. Feadz announced Uffie’s
arrival and just as she was about to jump on the podium the bar staff
up ended it so they could collect some empty glasses. It stayed this
way for a full minute with everyone shouting, ‘Put it down!’ and
Uffie eventually clambered aboard saying, ‘Well this is just
about the weirdest thing ever!’
Digitalism ensured January 20th at The End was a full house – aided
and abetted by Erol, JoJo, Simian and Boys Noize - with their rock/rave
blowing the fluoro specs off the new ravers. Erol clambered atop
the dj booth at one point and plucked a big black balloon from the
ceiling and bounced it out across the crowd. Had he put it there
beforehand?
|