how was alessandro cortini, though?
he mostly did social network style
stuff, which was predictable, but maybe not what i was expecting. he
was on late and finished late. and, then, i was essentially stuck there
listening to dubstep (which i can't stand) until the buses started
running again.
when the works shut down, it
seems to have opened up a void that is still kind of settling. but, it
freed the scene up and gave rise to marble, which is a bar that has both
a crowd and a stylistic focus that i greatly prefer over the works.
like most of detroit, i actually hated the works - i hated the
atmosphere, i hated the djs and i hated the scene. it was a gross,
disgusting place full of gross, disgusting people - and very, very bad
music. but, on some nights, it was the only party in town, and people
seemed to not want to put on other parties because everybody was going
there, anyways.
i've noticed recently that the
dubstep kids are migrating to marble, and i'm hoping they don't settle
in there. marble was great precisely because it wasn't full of
the old works crowd of dubstep people. it was an older and less shallow
audience, over all. it might be too late, though, and if they settle in,
and the management embraces them, i might find myself needing to look
somewhere else. for now, i've got plaid coming up at the start of the
month and we'll see what happens next year...
personally, i think
that the leland club is a better spot for the dubstep kids. those goth
nights are always dead, and they've been upstaged by small's, anyways.
they could save their bar by becoming the new works, and that would be
fine with me, if it means protecting marble from the wubbz invasion, and
everything that means.
however the dust
settles, i'm just hoping there's a consistent way to avoid dubstep on a
weekly basis. for a while, there wasn't, and i ended up hanging out in a
place that i didn't actually really want to be in - and, as it turns
out, didn't really want me there, either.