Double Dipped – Spinning out from Ravescene magazine, Double Dipped kicked off at Labrynth in 1991 and went on to host legendary nights at Turnmills, Enfield Palladium, and Bagleys. With events like Submerged, Sky High, and The Secret Garden, it became a defining force in London’s early ’90s rave scene.
The magazine [Ravescene] grew into Double Dipped, as we decided to promote our own events. The first one was at Christmas at Labryinth, and we went on to run nights at Turnmills, Enfield Palladium, various sports centre locations, and of course, Bagleys. We ended up running a regular Friday night at Bagleys … For quite a while we worked with Joe promoting Labryinth, before going our separate ways.
Gwen Howells, interview www.oldskoolreview.co.uk September 2009
1991
Date
Venue
Event
14th November
12 Dalston Lane
Ravescene Launch Party
19th December
12 Dalston Lane
Ravescene / Visual Contact Christmas Party
A big, big thanks goes out to all those who attended Ravescene’s Launch party at Club Labrynth on November 14th. Special thanks go to Visual Contact for the dancers, Vinyl Contact for the D.J.’s and Turbo Trance for the P.A., and of course to Joe and Phil.
The idea of the party was to introduce people within the industry to new ideas e.g. Brain machines, to hear fresh young D.J.’s and to see various new and interesting merchandising. Contracts and cheques were exchanged on the night. Diaries clear for Thursday December 19th 10 pm-4 am for the Ravescene/Visual Contact Christmas Party, at Club Labrynth.
Ravescene Magazeen, Issue 3
1992
Date
Venue
Event
25th April
12 Dalston Lane
Double Dipped 1992 Ravescene Party III
23rd May
12 Dalston Lane
Double Dipped 1992 Ravescene Party IV
13th June
12 Dalston Lane
Party V
18th July
12 Dalston Lane
Ravescene Magazeen – For Those Who Remember
15th August
12 Dalston Lane
Ravescene Magazeen
September
The Soundshaft
Sunday Dipped
19th September
12 Dalston Lane
Ravescene / Double Dipped
17th October
12 Dalston Lane
Double Dipped – The Party
7th November
12 Dalston Lane
Double Dipped
12th December
12 Dalston Lane
Double Dipped – An Underwater Experience
25th April 1992 – Ravescene Party III
23rd May 1992 – Ravescene Party IV
13th June 1992 – Ravescene Party 5
18th July 1992 – Suck It And See
15th August 1992
19th September 1992
Sunday Dipped at The Soundshaft – September 1992
17th October 1992 – Double Dipped – The Party
7th November 1992
The next Double Dipped which is to be a benefit for the Whale & Dolphin Conservation Society, will not now be held at Labrynth on December 12th. This is due to circumstances beyond both our, and the venue owners control. However, we will be holding both this event and a launch party for the Year Book later in December at Central London Venues.
Ravescene Magazine Issue 28
24th December 1992 – Submerged
We have put on monthly events since April 25th 1992. To date they have all been held at The Labrynth in London, which in our opinion is one of the friendliest, safest and most interesting clubs around. The venue has around 10 rooms on 3 floors, plus a large garden. On our nights, we always pick the DJ’s both for their music and their attitude. We have happy techno on the main floor, breakbeat in the dungeon and deep house and trance in the attic. We try to make our parties fun, a great night out and a place to meet new friends.
Call Yourself A Raver? Ravescene Yearbook 1993
1993
Date
Venue
Event
April (weekly)
12 Dalston Lane
Every Picture Tells A Story & Double Dipped
April 1993 – Every Picture Tells A Story & Double Dipped
May & June 1993 – Every Picture Tells A Story & Double Dipped
1994
Date
Venue
Event
1994-02-26
Bagleys Film Studios
Double Dipped – In Celebration Of The North American Indian
1994-04-09
Bagleys Film Studios
Double Dipped – Sky High
1994-04-15
Turnmills
Club Together
1994-05-14
Turnmills
Destiny The Cream & Doubled Dipped – Submerged
1994-08-28
Bagleys Film Studios
Double Dipped – The Secret Garden
1994-09-10
Pump House
1994-10-29
Ravedome Heston
Double Dipped – Trick Or Treat
1994-12-16
Bagleys Film Studios
Double Dipped
1994-12-31
Ravedome Heston
Double Dipped New Dawn
26th February 1994 – In Celebration Of The North American Indian
9th April 1994 – Sky High (Pre Flyer)
9th April 1994 – Sky High
15th April 1993 – Club Together with Elevation
29th April 1994 – Destiny The Cream & Doubled Dipped – Submerged14th May 1994 -Submerged28th August 1994 – Double Dipped – The Secret Garden
Well, many thanks to each and everyone of you who made ‘The Secret Garden’ at Bagleys on August Bank Holiday Sunday the biggest and best Double Dipped to date! However, those of you who were there or tried too late to get tickets will have realised that Bagleys just isn’t big enough anymore to accomodate everyone that wanted to attend. It was in fact the biggest party anywhere over the Bank Holiday weekend! So, we’ve had to make the decision to separate the house and hardcore for the time being and to move to different venues.
The Ravedome at Heston is where we’ll be throwing our next massive hardcore party. We first saw the venue eighteen months ago before it even had its full license and it’s absolutely perfect. It’s easy to get to from anywhere in the country being just inside the M25 on the M4, and has loads of on site, patrolled parking. The venue itself is like an upside down Viking long boat which should give excellent acoustics. The main arena is huge, bigger by far than any regularly used rave venue and we’ve had to go really overboard with the lasers, lights and sound. A thirty foot stage is being built to give loads of room for he PA’s and dancers with a stage set in the theme of the evening, which as the party takes place on Saturday 29th October couldn’t be anything else but Halloween!
Ravescene Magazeen – Issue 52
10th Spetember 1994 – House Division @ Pump House29th October 1994 – Double Dipped – Trick Or Treat16th December 1994 – Double Dipped Back At Bagleys31st December 1994 – Double Dipped New Dawn
Original article published on the now dead website www.oldskoolreview.co.uk which I discovered via Rendezvous Projects. It can still be found in it’s original format on Wayback Machine. Published dates taken from a post on the rolldabeats forum. All images & cover scans are my own.
Note, issues 18 & 26 were never released hence the existence of 19A and 27A.
Article First Published – September 2009
Many of you will remember Ravescene Magazine. It was in a folded A4 format, on white paper with a mix of black and purple/mauve/red print. It was packed full of all the latest goings on in London Town, and featured interviews and reviews of all kinds. I used to get my copy in the post as I lived in Grimsby at the time. It was what kept me in touch with what was at that time the hub of the scene. Trying to get hold of early copies these days is a hard task indeed.
We caught up with Gwen Howells, the lady behind Ravescene Magazine and Double Dipped, the night she used to host alongside the magazine…………
How would you describe yourself as a youth before you discovered the rave scene?
“Before raving I was fairly typical suburban teenager, but when I left home at 18 and went to college we were all into the indie scene, and many of my friends were in bands. I used to go to loads of gigs seeing such bands as Siouxie and the Banshees, the Fire Engines, the Cure etc. I was never into chart music, and even through my 20’s when I worked as a very respectable estate agent, married and had 2 children I still couldn’t get into the mainstream”
How did you get into raving /clubbing and when would this have been?
“Raving reared it’s head when my then brother-in-law got some tickets for one of the early Raindances. It just clicked with me – the music, the people, everything. From then on it escalated pretty quickly, and the first 2 clubs we went to regularly were Orange at the Camden Palace on Friday’s, and the Astoria on a Saturday, and it was around then that the Astoria got the first 6am licence – even their flyers were cut-out 6am shape. I loved Camden, ‘Strings of Life’ was the tune that everyone seemed to wait for, and then the dancefloor just filled, and the night began”
Issue 1 25th October 1991Issue 2 8th November 1991Issue 3 22nd November 1991Issue 4 6th December 1991Issue 5 13th December 1991Issue 6 17th January 1992Issue 7 31st January 1992Issue 8 14th February 1992Issue 9 28th February 1992Issue 10 13th March 1992Issue 11 27th March 1992Issue 12 10th April 1992
Can you tell us a bit about the first raves/events you attended?
“I lived in Chingford at the time, so the West End wasn’t too far away. Raindance was in Jenkins Lane, Stratford, or East Ham I think, even closer to home.
I have to admit, that even in the very first days, the cost of it all was a factor in starting Ravescene. It wasn’t cheap, raving in those days, what with paying £25 for a ticket, then another £50 – 75 for other essentials. Some people financed it by selling E’s, but that wasn’t for me.
At first, I got into places for free by dancing! I was friends with some great people like Mike and Funki B of Elevation, (Lea Bridge Road) and through them I got into dancing on the stage at loads of parties. Quite a few of them even paid me! Good memories of Reincarnation at Herne Bay, and a massive rave near London, huge, huge party but I can’t remember the name of it. And of course, we were VIP’d with at least a plus 2. All through ’91 there were loads of parties, in lots of places.”
What gave you the initial impetus to start Ravescene? Was it purely your idea, or was it a group project?
“By ’92 the day job had become less and less enjoyable, with the weekends becoming longer, and with the recession biting deep it made sense to find an alternative source of income. And so Ravescene was born. It started as just an A4 sheet, printed both sides, and folded to A5. We sold a couple of ads (I think Elevation were our first ever advertisers) and we flew it for free, outside various clubs and raves. We wanted to write a magazine that had all the facts and gossip that we all spent hours talking about when we were chilling out at home after a long night raving. And raving was a community – everyone knew everyone”
Can you tell us a little bit about the first issue? What was it like trying to organize advertising, features, event coverage etc?
“All the promoters loved it, although occasionally our policy of ‘tell it like it is’ got us in trouble. I remember mentioning that a waltzer car had fallen off at a Raindance (true, I was next to it when it happened) and Ray tried to get us to print a retraction, saying it never happened! Because I wouldn’t he refused to put me on his guest list for quite a while afterwards, and only relented when we started printing readers letters slagging off Raindance.”
How did you promote the first issue? And where and when did you sell it?
“From the very first issue it was a hit. We printed around 40,000 copies every fortnight and from the beginning we were totally independent. We wrote reviews of clubs and vinyl, and we attracted some really good contributers. Kris the aritist was amazing. He was only 15 when he started drawing for us, and he beats Pez hands down. He designed the double dipped logos – the purple ohm and the techno raver. Claire Henderson wrote the articles on drugs, and they were properly researched and factual. Not made up crap and hearsay. We listed all the forthcoming events and all the gossip from the scene.
Ravescene was never sold, it was always free. We gave it away like a flyer, but you could subscribe and we’d send every issue in the post. We also took bundles around all the record shops, posting to the shops that were too far away to visit personally.”
Issue 13 24th April 1992Issue 14 8th May 1992Issue 15 22nd May 1992Issue 16 5th June 1992Issue 17 19th June 1992Issue 19 3rd July 1992Issue 19A 17th July 1992Issue 20 31st July 1992Issue 21 14th August 1992Issue 22 28th August 1992Issue 23 11th September 1992Issue 24 25th September 1992Issue 25 9th October 1992Issue 27 23rd October 1992Issue 27A 6th November 1992Issue 28 27th November 1992Issue 29 11th December 1992Issue 30 15th January 1993
Talk us through issue 2. At what point did you decide that it might be a project worth continuing with?
“Producing it became a full time job. We had a lot of help. Adrian Catwell was our right hand man, indispensable. Kristopher was a good friend, Garage DJ and reviewer. The Warlock reviewed all the techno and hardcore, plus being a very talented DJ. Then there was Claire I’ve already mentioned, and Natalie, Sean, Katie and Emma, all stalwart flyers, not forgetting The Criminal and Dean the Raving Plumber. We couldn’t pay anyone, but they all got into parties for free, and we had a good time”
What were the highlights of the first year in print? Did you continue running it from the same place, and how did you manage the typeset/printing process?
“I designed the magazine and did the layout on an Apple Mac, using Quark Express. The disk was given to our printer who usually turned the job around in a couple of days. Then we collected it, dished it out to the flying team, sent out the subscribers copies, and delivered and posted to all the record shops. We started to fly for other promoters as well, and we even put together packages of Ravescene and flyers, in a plastic covering which we put on car windscreens.
Doing the magazine got us introduced to many people. In particular, we had a lot of support from Joe & Phil at Labryinth. I guess we first went to Labryinth the same way everyone else did – someone told us about it, we took a chance, checked it out and had the best night ever! I loved that club, and the music. ‘Promised Land’ by Joe Smooth was a Labryinth anthem, and you rarely heard any Drum and Bass crap. In my view it was Drum and Bass and Jungle that killed rave. I’m not saying I was a cheesy quaver, but I always preferred the house side of things. The uplifting Balearic beats were more my thing.”
How long did it run for, and what was the plan? Was it just a run it until you get fed up kind of project?
“Eventually, the magazine grew into Double Dipped, as we decided to promote our own events. The first one was at Christmas at Labryinth, and we went on to run nights at Turnmills, Enfield Palladium, various sports centre locations, and of course, Bagleys. We ended up running a regular Friday night at Bagleys, with our biggest one-off being the Spirit of Raindance party (that was the one that had the swimming pool and funfair outside). For quite a while we worked with Joe promoting Labryinth, before going our separate ways. We even published the Ravescene Yearbook.
It all ended when another promoter had a party on a Bank Holiday Sunday at Bagleys, and one of the door men was stabbed. Although it didn’t happen on our night the venue was hexed, and our numbers dropped from 1500 to around 500. We made a mistake, we stayed at Bagleys, instead we should have found another venue straight away, as our name was good and we could have filled any other club. This happened in May, and I’d given birth to my daughter Tara in the February (her birth was announced in Time Out by David Swindells!) and so my priorities had changed and maybe I just didn’t have the energy to get back into the thick of things. But to be honest, the vibe had gone by then, it wasn’t the same anymore. Too much Charlie, too much Drum and Bass, and too much interference from outside influences. I left London in the November of that year.”
Issue 31 5th February 1993Issue 32 19th February 1993Issue 33 12th March 1993Issue 34 2nd April 1993Issue 35 16th April 1993Issue 36 30th April 1993Issue 37 14th May 1993Issue 38 4th June 1993Issue 39 25th June 1993Issue 40 16th July 1993Issue 41 30th July 1993Issue 42 20th August 1993Issue 43 24th September 1993Issue 44 15th October 1993Issue 45 19th November 1993Issue 46 17th December 1993Issue 47 21st January 1994Issue 48 4th February 1994Issue 49 11th March 1994Issue 50 25th March 1994Issue 51 20th May 1994Issue 52 23rd September 1994Double Dipped Flyer 19th September 1992
There must have been a few heavy moments…………discuss……..
“On the whole, looking back, I have good memories. I just registered on Facebook, and so many people have been in touch.”
Worst moments?
There was a horrible weekender at some Butlins camp up north, Carl Cox was the only set worth listening to and they closed the pool so we couldn’t use it to chill in.
Pete Tong trying to mix.
Having to have 24 hr bodyguard for a while when another firm was trying to take over our door.
Best moments?
Really cheesy, but ‘what’s your name, where do you come from, what’ve you done’ springs to mind. It reminds me of all those fantastic nights when you just chatted to anyone and everyone.
The boat party was one of the best, and I’m sure that everyone who was on it remembers it.
One night at a club when a punter was being gropingly horrible to some girls so the doorman stripped him naked and sent him on his way……..
Here are my top 10’s (in no particular order)
DJ’s
Billy Bunter Adrian Age Colin Dale Carl Cox Slipmatt Loftgroover The Criminal
Venues & Top Nights
Rage (Heaven on a Thursdsay) Orange at Camden (not the Rocket, hated that) Labryinth That boat party we did after the Enfield Palladium one morning The early Raindances Brighton Zap with Colin Dale Reincarnation
Top PA’s
N-JOI Prodigy for Labryinth at Bagleys Tony di Bart (Double Dipped at Bagleys the week he was No 1) Rozalla
Call Yourself A Raver? Ravescene Year Book 1993
Can you explain what you did afterwards, and what your thoughts were on the music and the way it changed over the years?
“After I left London I went back to Uni and finished my degree. I got married again and ended up as an estate agent again (this is what I was doing before Ravescene). Now, apart from having an estate agency, we also farm rare breed pigs. I live in the country with ponies, llamas, donkeys and chickens. An idyllic life, really.
I kinda miss the life, and I do go out still, but I really don’t like the drinking vibe at all. I just don’t get the attitude of going out to get wasted.
As far as the music goes, to my mind in the last 15 years there’s been no innovation at all, which is why all the old classics still work so well. If you go 15 years back before raving i.e 1973 the music was totally different. Now, it’s just all a variation on a theme. I couldn’t have gone clubbing with my Mum and Dad, and listened to their music, but my son can go out with me!”
And a big shout out to……..
All the pirate radio DJ’s who entertained us at home during the week.
All the people that helped us fly, especially in the winter when it was cold and raining.
Kris the Artist, Natalie, Emma & Chrissie, Sean & Katie, Adrian, Chris, Scott from Slimetime, Paul, Dean the Raving Plumber, Terry Turbo, Mike and Funki B, Joe, Ginge, Dawn, Daniel ‘Billy’ Bunter,
Ravescene Magazeen #51 (May ’94) marks the end of Destiny/The Cream at Clacton Pier. After iconic all-nighters and thousands of ravers, they move on to new events at Turnmills and Bagleys, keeping the spirit of UK hardcore alive.
Published 20th May 1994 (approx)
Pages 8 (A5 B&W)
Strapline A BLEAK, DRUG OBLIQUE MUSIC?
FEATURED ARTICLE – The End Of The Pier
After putting on many of the best parties Destiny/The Cream and Rise & Shine are no longer to be found on Clacton Pier. Thousands will be disappointed that this era has come to an end as it was one of the most unusual and interesting venues in the country. The pier was purchased by Christians father in 1981. He rebuilt the existing dance hall and arcade to provide Oscar’s the night club and The Cockney Pride pub. For several years the club ran three successful soul nights until the mood swung round to rave. Christian joined forces with Lee and Destiny/The Cream began it’s long run with weekly clubs and monthly monster bashes using the whole pier. The most recent all nighters have had up to seven rooms, covering the whole house music spectrum from trance through handbag to hardcore. These parties were all ticket only and attracted up to 5,000 people each time. However, during November of 1993 the pier slipped into receivership due to the pressures of the economy. The Receivers took over the running of the pier and in their wisdom after watching how professionally Lee and Christian ran their events decided that they could do better, so on 11th April 1994 Lee and Christian were told that they were no longer allowed on the premises and all their equipment and trading facilities were withheld and remain so to this day. This would have been the biggest summer so far for all Destiny/The Cream members and would have become the best event of it’s type this year. Instead the events at the pier, now known as Love Nation have failed to attract any where near the same numbers as Destiny/the Cream and if you’ve seen the flyers you’d understand why. Destiny/The Cream seemed to have knack of booking the finest DJ’s in the country in all aspects of house music.
Destiny/The Cream have not retired though. Lee from Destiny said that “what was then happened. It was the right venue, the right music, at the right time. It cannot be created again. Now what is important is the future, and the art of creating a good club is being able to adapt and change. There are other venues in the country just as interesting as The Pier, albeit different. It’s what you put into it that counts”.
Lee & Christian have been busy since leaving the Pier. They hosted a room at Double Dipped at Bagleys on 14th May and they have a special one-off at Hollywoods in Romford on Sunday 29th May. They are also co-hosting Submerged at Turnmills every Friday with Double Dipped. Why Turnmills? “It’s an original venue with the original vibe. Also it’s got PD drivers on the bass powered by Amcron amps which provide one of the best sound systems you can experience in today’s world! We also like the way it’s laid out, with two rooms of music plus loads of places to sit and chat. It’s such a new venue in this scene, so it’s fresh and everyone who’s been there so far has loved it. We just need to work really hard to get the word about. It’s really easy to find as well, even if you’re from outside London like us, being about five minutes from Kings Cross, between the City and Holborn.”
Choci’s Chewn’s
ADVERTS
Double Dipped & Destiny The Cream present ‘Submerged’
Ravescene Magazeen #50 (Mar ’94) marks 50 issues with a look back at iconic UK raves, DJs, and parties. From Raindance to Sterns, relive the highs of the early ’90s hardcore and rave scene.
Published 25th March 1994 (approx)
Pages 8 (A5 B&W)
Strapline TRY-BALLISTIC
FEATURED ARTICLE – GOLDEN TIMES
Well, here it is, the fiftieth issue of Ravescene. It seems so long ago that we produced the very first copy and this seems as good an opportunity as any to look back on nearly three mental years. The scene has changed an awful lot since we stared and we are forever getting letters harking back to the ‘good old days’. but were raves any better then? I don’t think so. The scene today, although different is flourishing and very much alive. The music keeps changing and moving forward and is still the true sound of the underground. We first started raving at house parties and the first club we went to was Orange at Camden Palace on a Friday. That place kicked, total respect to The Orange for making those nights ones to remember.
At the beginning of ‘91 loftgroover was playing there and memories of going up to him for the name of Djum Djum spring to mind. That was also the summer that Raindance at Jenkins Lane were the ultimate events. They held two parties in May, the first one smaller as World Party were at the Essex showground the same night (their fences fell down) and all night the MC (Hardcore General) was hyping up the rave. For the rest of the summer Raindance was huge and we didn’t miss one! DJ’s at that time were Slipmatt, Face, Eddie Richards, Fabio & Carl Cox to name a few. Remember the best Raindance in Cambridge – the one when it rained so instead of one big tent there were three or four smaller ones? And everyone was dancing up to their knees in mud?
Then there were the Dance ’91 at Pickets Lock promoted by Pure. Huge events, over 4,000 indoors until they got stopped by complaints about the noise levels from nearby residents. There’s a twelve screen cinema just opened on the site recently. And talking of Pure, they were of course responsible for the long running Rage at Heaven every Thursday night, always at the forefront of the new music. Rage was the place where you went every week and met everyone and there were always DJ’s running around with the newest tunes under there arms, just hot off the press and given to them by the record companies who knew that they’d find all the major DJ’s there, every week. Who remembers the Rage Halloween party where some poor sod spent the night in a bathful of maggots? Or the beach party towards the end where the floor of the whole venue was covered in sand and the stage opened up to reveal a swimming pool! ’91 was also the heyday of the Wonderland Arena in East London, hot, sweaty and disgusting facilities but what raves! Elevation in particular I remember, one absolutely rammed with the MC telling us all how the tent at Raindance that night had become unsafe – it did, I was there and everyone was sent home early.
PA’s at that time were The Prodigy and Shades of Rhythm and of course, N-Joi. Moby ‘Go!’ was a huge tune played in the main hardcore rooms of every rave, but raves in those days didn’t have alternative rooms, they didn’t need it as all the DJ’s had their own styles and the music didn’t start to get maniacally fast with breakbeats until ’92 and after that of course drum and bass came in which has radically split the scene, some would say almost killing it off during the dark days of 93.
But back to the past, and no retrospective would be complete without a mention of the truly huge triumphs (and disasters) such as Vision at Popham (40,000 people and not a single dry place to stand and Keith from Prodigy rolling in the mud) Fantazia at Donnington (spending all night looking for your friends and trying to work out why the sound was so low), the Universe parties before they got too big, the Perceptions, the T2 hangars, having to get your car towed from muddy car parks, the police checks on the way to Wisbech, the arrests at Wisbech. Watching the sun come up over the sea at all the raves at the seaside like Reincarnation in Kent, Storm at Hastings, Destiny at Clacton. Remember the queues at Telepathy, Marshgate Lane every week? And what about that Fantazia at Bournemouth with all the television coverage of everyone sitting on the beach afterwards? Sterns has to be mentioned, still sorely missed, in memory of Mensa who died in a car accident last month.
Best memory has to be The Living Dream in East London in June ‘91. Worst – I don’t know as the good moments (and there have been many) tend to blot out the bad. Yes, the scene has changed but as long as the people and the vibe stays the same it lives on!
Ravescene Magazeen #49 (Mar ’94) showcases hardcore events like Double Dipped, Jungle Fever, Fusion, and The Prodigy. Essential listings for London and UK rave-goers planning their March-April adventures.