In search of dance music's mojo

20/04/2006

Kevin Braddock lets rip on how club culture killed our sex lives and how to put that special kick back in. Couples twist, jive, mash-potato and hitchhike with each other like 50 years of House, Techno, Hip Hop, Electronica, Drum & Bass, synthesisers, club culture, raves, Ibiza and Ecstasy never happened. Something strange is happening in London nightlife. People are dancing with each other again. Once a month a crew of promoters stage an event called Jerry's Joint in a tired, red-walled old pub called The Boogaloo. It is a dim dive off an arterial route out of the city that looks and smells as if it hasn't seen a vacuum cleaner in years.

The club isn't the only regular Fifties evening in the capital. It probably isn't the only nightspot with a music policy time locked the other side of 1962. It definitely isn't the only London club where they play Little Richard, Eddie Cochrane, pre-psychedelia Beatles, Bo Diddley, Gene Vincent, Elvis, Big Joe Turner and hundreds or other rock & soul singers your parents probably hadn't even heard of, back to back on 45s. But it's probably the only jive joint run by "cats" whose average age is 25 - people who've seen everything the world's clubbiest city has to offer and decided the only beat that bites wears a leather jacket, a pair of faded 501s and quiff that defies gravity through Black & White's pomade.

Jerry's is a drinking club. Beer and shots are the intoxicant of choice. This is a good act to follow if you want to put the sex back into your nights out; alcohol is a social lubricant and makes people think about sex. Other stimulants are not necessary. People go there to sink ale, pop their collars and curl their lips over a cigarette, or flop round on couches, talk the weekend out and share discoveries of new old music. Because Jerry's joint is a dancing night, people also go there to shake a leg for the opposite sex. Cute girls dress in primary coloured A-line dresses, prom shoes and bobby socks, and twirl round a tiny dance floor in the space vacated by some table and chairs. People feel like they're starring in "Happy Days" or "Grease". Boys empty their jars of beer, step out of the shadows and throw poses on the edge of floor before taking the first slender hand that whirls their way. Elvis' "O Sole Mio" cha-cha-chas on decrepit speakers. Couples twist, jive, mash-potato and hitchhike with each other like 50 years of House, Techno, Hip Hop, Electronica, Drum & Bass, synthesisers, club culture, raves, Ibiza and Ecstasy never happened.

Saturday night winds on into the early morning. Elsewhere in London's club dungeons, clubbers perform a metronomic step-left, step-right, or grind their way further into the tiles of the dancefloor. They dance in the anonymous blur of everyone else, or they dance together but alone, sealed into private euphoric hypnosis under the strobes, staring blankly up at the DJ, or down at floor beneath their feet, or not knowing quite where to look. But at Jerry's Joint, people are looking each other in the eyes. They're holding hands, throwing ambitious twirls, twists, pirouettes, spins and jives that look more sincere than professional. People spill out drunk at 2am, laughing and kissing. Resolutions are made to sign up for twist classes on a weekday night to make it more fun.

Everyone who goes there remembers Jerry's Joint, not necessarily the next morning. What goes on at Jerry's Joint is no more explicitly about sex than any other club anywhere in Europe. But it shows up just how un-sexy the mainstream club experience has got, just how far away dance music - music meant for dancing to - has left behind what caused it to exist in the first place. No one disputes that dancing's true evolutionary function is attraction and selection. At Jerry's Joint the dancing is more like the bit before the sex: the coy, romantic holding-hands bit. It's like intensely, wide-eyed excitement of initial bodily contact and promise, just like Elvis Presley's insurrectionary hip-shaking prefigured the global teenage sex-quake of the liberated Sixties. It's been a long time since dance music could realistically claim to be the unifying social glue of a generation.

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