Events on Friday 15th February
“In a laid back and social style the 'Office Party' riffs and draws on the rich history of
the Cube as a place where creative experiments in IT, HR, bar management, account-keeping, revenue and organisational form have always been core to the project, and sometimes more exciting than the public side. Expect Access All Areas departmental tours, DJs, performers, music plus a Nail Bar.”
From:
RADMIN Office Party
“The Shy Manifesto is a bittersweet coming-of-age comedy drama about a shy boy who is fed up of constantly being told to come out of his shell. Tonight he is to address an audience of radical shy comrades and incite the meek to finally rise up and inherit the earth. But memories of the previous night’s drunken escapades at a classmate’s end-of-term party keep intruding, and threaten to upend the fragile identity he has created for himself.”
From:
The Shy Manifesto
“Brighton art rock independents. Combining AN AMPLIFIED ORGAN, fuzzy bass and drums. Lazybones come to Bristol for the first time to celebrate the heroic release of ‘Bang! Bang!’, their debut EP. It shall be joyous.”
From:
Lazybones, Martyrials, CHANG, Don Juan
“Rusty Shackle are a five-piece folk-rock band from South Wales. They have released three successful albums are an experienced live band, playing festivals and venues around the world for the last eight years.”
From:
Rusty Shackle Launch new album at The Exchange
“Lillie West initially started Lala Lala as a way to communicate things that she felt she could never say out loud. But on The Lamb, her sophomore LP and debut for Hardly Art, she has found strength in vulnerability. Through bracing hooks and sharp lyrics, the 24-year-old songwriter and guitarist illustrates a nuanced look on her own adulthood — her fraught insecurity, struggles with addiction, and the loss of several people close to her. Across the album’s 12 tracks, West carefully examines the skeletons in her closet for the first time, hoping to capture honest snapshots of her past selves.”
From:
LaLa LaLa