Author: CodeSouth.FM
It is a horrible on West Street in Brighton you can catch the code South family on the last Friday of the month every month Broadcasting live interacting with the public and meeting new lifelong code South listeners supporters and friends Each session is recorded and can be downloaded here (Codesouth Soundlcoud link to follow) Keeping it as a free event development manager Darren Carnaby said “Life is hard enough right now we don’t want any more barriers to people being able to enjoy music and have a dance, chat, laugh and indulge in making those happy endorphins we need so badly at the moment. We negotiated drinks promotions and a prime spot smack on the strip in Brighton whether it’s for a post-work catch up with friends or pre-club cocktail CodeSouth has you covered.
Website After having a good clear out we been busy making the site quicker and easier to navigate with accessibility ISO standards. Now you can connect with your favourite station with just one click send us an email find out where we offer coat afterlife grab a new T-shirt or limited edition bit of merchandise and supporters as we continue to push the freshest talent those change you want to hear and you can’t anywhere else. [link to webshop]
Well we won’t say too loud or we may spook it BUT that means festival season is underway and Brighton has a new must attend event. Summer linkup is set in a secret location 20 minutes from Brighton in the lush rolling hills. With two stages powered by Random Audio and Audio-Z, the CodeSouth DJs you know and love plus a long list of new talent this promises to be another legendary CodeSouth party. Speaking about the summer linkup Darren Carnaby the development manager said “CodeSouth has always been at the forefront of parties in Brighton – in streets during Pride, in restaurants, takeovers in warehouses even sometimes in clubs the only place they haven’t had a pop-up party was in a field” Having secured a licence before hundred 99 partygoers and installing two stages of fruit truck village toilets souk marketplace VIP garden area and tents we are looking forward to bringing music lovers together from Angmering, Barnham, Bexhill, […]
After nine years under the previous management CodeSouth is part of the Purple Daze group. Purple Daze has a history being involved with clubs, events, festivals and education programs. Speaking of the acquisition development manager Darren Carnaby said “CodeSouth has always been a foundation break in the dance music scene and we want to build that seen up again in new and exciting ways”. Since the takeover the station has started working in partnership with the University of Brighton, Secret Mayhem, Molson Coors, Beak brewery and The Sterns Reunion society.
With a prolific output since his emergence on the scene in 1993, Roni Size took things to the next level in 1997 when his New Forms album won the coveted Mercury Music Prize. The ground-breaking project was a critical and commercial success and contained acclaimed tracks such as “Brown Paper Bag” and “Heroes.” Its release was preceded in late 1996 with the Reasons For Sharing EP, which contained an addictive jazzy roller called “Trust Me,” which had been tearing up dancefloors on dubplate and would go on to be a fixture in DJs boxes for years to come. Roni Size: Back in the day, we were in the studio as much as possible. We didn’t have much equipment at the time so myself, Krust, Die and Suv were using Smith & Mighty’s studio; Tricky and Flynn & Flora would be in there as well. We did that until we could afford to build our own studio, Studio Drum, which we all shared. […]
Warped basslines and inched-up garage have been hurtling through UK clubland since the late ‘90s and rippling through the noughties. Decades on, these sounds have come back into the charts and the underground with a burgeoning new wave. What do the originators think about it? It’s a simple fact: the UK loves UK garage. Although that’s never really been up for debate, particularly as UKG has enjoyed a heavy revival over the last few years, its various strands and orbital genres have waxed and waned in popularity over time. But the throbbing, adrenalised sounds of speed garage and bassline have been steadily creeping back into the dance consciousness. Then in summer 2022, a speed garage-inspired track with a Korg M1 organ bassline shot to UK #1: Interplanetary Criminal and Eliza Rose’s ‘B.O.T.A (Baddest Of Them All)’. Big basslines, breakdowns and warpers are causing havoc in clubs everywhere, with a new crop of producers putting their own take on the rough […]
-
Pages