Down, Deep Down Where The Love Lives
Words: Mike Media
March 22, 2021

Inspiring and well timed, UK’s leading House label continue to push the envelope forward, reminding us about the positivity our chosen music delivers and the long lasting impressions it creates. Time to don some glitter, pour a glass a wine and settle into this latest video feature.

Out of the global fog of this new ordinary comes an epic time capsule in the form of Where Love Lives. Defected’s brand new hour-long narrative will become an inspiring viewpoint for many, generally cherished and effectively celebrating the brand Glitterbox and realtime days of Disco. Shot more than two years, it fluidly archives the regular moving accounts of its entertainers, artists, DJs and engaged audience who all offer a typical connection, one saved by the dancefloor.

Where Love Lives narrative is a moving excursion through self-acknowledgment, articulation and the force of connection. It’s been a little more than a year since worldwide Dance floors shut due to the global pandemic. Clubs and settings around the planet have been pushed to the brink of collapse by Coronavirus limitations. For clubbers, the obscured recollections of partying side by side in a loud, sweat-soaked setting feels more like an aggregate fantasy than a common modern reality.

The documentary opens with Lucy Bubble, presumably Glitterbox’s generally conspicuous and vigorous entertainer. Any individual who’s been to a Glitterbox event will remember her short, dyed light hair, (whirling around the decks and platform like a had cyclone exorcizing an uncontainable desire to move, regularly to her very own beat). Her story is a natural one throughout the narrative, highlighting a battle for self-acknowledgment. Lucy discusses how meeting similar individuals within East London’s eccentric clubbing locale has permitted her to start opening up about her past and experiences as a trans lady. Sharing how the dancefloor has presented the opportunity to commend herself.

Adding to this, MX Fit’s story is comparably moving, enveloped in self-mischief and destructive endeavours, he left Paris for London where he soon discovered comfort in style and drag, with a liberating self-articulate rise from the cinders of society’s sexual orientation standards. As the documentary advances, there are numerous accounts of self-damage and self destruction.

Here Glitterbox’s gatherings at Hï Ibiza, Service of Sound, The Nursery, Croatia and Printworks London highlights an obvious token of the truth confronting numerous transsexual networks, where around 72% have self-hurt, and more than one in four have harboured self destruction. Those details are repeated by Honey Dijon’s remarks, who sets to uncover the “biggest success that I have, for me, is that I fucking survived as a trans person of colour.” Alarming in fact, but a commonplace emotion echoed in today’s society.

Afterward, fashion identity Mark Wardel talks through his vision for the gathering’s visual personality while DJ and producer Jellybean Benetiz takes us on a whistlestop journey through New York City’s select Disco establishments, including David Mancuso’s The Space and Nicky Siano’s The Gallery and Larry Levan’s hallowed Paradise Garage. Siano, who discusses the blend of people on club dancefloors reflects straight, gay, white, Asian, Hispanic, youthful to old.“A different race, a different sexual preference, it didn’t matter, ’cause you were all there to groove on the music.” 

Maybe the most impactful component mirrors entertainer and artist Billy Porter, as he reflects the AIDS  crisis that overtook the US in the last part of the ’80s and mid ’90s. Once more, the dancefloor offered a protective space to recuperate and re-energize, similar to a community gathering “like a family reunion for us every week.” 

These freedoms aren’t only attained to Glitterbox dancefloors, however the Deferted party has effectively directed this ethos of self expression since its original beginning in 2012. By means of its DJs and entertainers, whose accounts reflect those on the dancefloor. It’s a credit that Where Love Lives isn’t only an hour long advertisement for their own branded features, further focussing on the individual account of its actual characters. While the DJs are plainly essential to any club night, providing the vibe and energy people remain connected and informed by a musical thread across the world. 

Wrapping up with shots and accounts of Glitterbox’s milestone party at London’s behemoth Printworks, a significant part of the feature initiates with personal stories, radiant appearances and pivotal artists. With the world’s clubs remaining shut en masse, the circumstance of the debut may appear to be suspect, however, the pandemic makes the scenes even more remarkable.

As the clubbing scene faces perhaps the greatest test, here this small insight into the culture reverberates with the internal stories behind each dancefloor. Turn down. the lights, turn up the volume and time to shed a tear of joy as we’re once again reminded of the greatness of our scene in the knowledge that soon, once again, these times will return for all.

https://glitterboxibiza.com/  https://defected.com/

 

 

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