Archive for the ‘Ibiza Rave’ Category

NYC: Comfort, Florals And Optimistic Chic

New York After 10 days of fashion shows, its hard to imagine theres a boundary left to push, a color thats gone unused or a silhouette that hasnt been relaxed. While the collections were all over the map (and in some cases, the maps were all over the collections), there were a few big takeaways from the spring and summer 2015 shows at the now-completed New York Fashion week.

Optimism Is Chic

If there is one phrase that sums up much of the spring season at New York Fashion Week, Michael Kors had it: Optimistic chic.

His collection brought many of the weeks trends together, including 1950s-inspired circle skirts and crop tops: garden florals and embroideries; natural hues; gingham checks; spare, simple accessories and shoes made for walking.

The Oscar de la Renta and Diane von Furstenberg collections had similar feel good vibes, with classic ladylike styles.

Flowers Empower

Florals are a perennial favorite for the spring and summer collections, but the runways served up a bigger bouquet than usual. Floral motifs came in a range of forms: feathers arranged into a floral pattern on a coat at Thom Brownes garden-party-on-acid show, delicate yellow blossom embroideries on a sheer organza skirt at Kors and scattered stems printed on a fur coat at de la Renta.

On the mens side, Jack Spade mustered an urban floral army that included a chambray allover-floral suit and a flower-infused take on camo. David Harts retro-inspired menswear included a pair of linen trousers with a bold palm print inspired by the wallpaper at the Beverly Hills Hotel, and J. Lindebergs rock-meets-botany Biotopia collection included a black leather jacket with a back panel covered in white hand-painted daisies.

But it was Jerremy Scotts Psychedelic Jungle collection that served up the most fantastical flora of the week acid-drenched aloha shirts, flower-festooned babydoll dresses, button-front shirts and patchwork pants with the kind of bold blossoms not seen since the Rowan & Martins Laugh-in circa 1972.

Eclectic Is In

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NYC: Comfort, Florals And Optimistic Chic

Weekends Matter Newsletter – 19th September

In case your inbox missed out, head here to check out Jimmy Coultas' quick guide to the hottest events in the country this week.

Date published: 17th Sep 2014

Photo: M.A.N.D.Y.

We might be midway through the month, but there'sstill a raft of choices for you to keep things strictlyEarth, Wind and Fire - dancing in September.

Rave season is well and truly back. Nightvision in Edinburgh launches this weekend (check our look at the season's highlights), whilst down in Birmingham the 24 hour rave experiment will test your dedication to partying - hardcore enough?

Elsewhere there's Greg Wilson's Super Weird Substance tour starting in Manchester, Benny Benassi helps Ministry of Sound turn 23and Liverpool welcomes Carlo Lio to the Garage. Oh, and the massive Haus Festival in Newcastle, M.A.N.D.Y hitting Gorilla (check our interview with them), Seth Troxler ina warehouse in Southampton(check out his 'Cheeky Tech House Set' above), and Carl Cox closing off another bulldozer of a season in Ibiza. Phew!

There's a heck of a lot to look forward to beyond the weekend horizon as well,Cocoon London and the huge line up at Coventry's Outbreak Festival being two shining examples, not to mention Cream Birmingham's 8th birthday (read our interview with headliner David Morales).

Mercury Music Award nominees Jungle (above) have another date in Manchester, withUrban music sensation T-Pain hitting the city a little sooner. Garage rockers The Subways are off on tour, whilst on a ravier tip bass duo Gorgon Cityare also playing live around the nation, with We Love all set to bid farewell to Ibiza for one year and Showtek on their way to Glasgow.

Final note, we're at Freshers fairs this week giving you young students all the advice you need (something Danny Howard did too), plus we've got a great new competition for young promoters - check that out here.

I'm out to overdose on Curb Your Enthusiasm boxsets, till next time.

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Weekends Matter Newsletter - 19th September

5 unusual rave accessories Sophia Webster predicts we’ll be wearing for spring/summer 2015

Bondage boots, builder's belts and fruit emblazoned accessories are all on the agenda for spring/summer 2015 if Sophia Webster has anything to do with it

BY Alice Newbold | 14 September 2014

Sophia Webster's spring/summer 2015 collection might hone in on the hedonistic world of jungle rave, but, she tells The Telegraph, she's much more of a garage girl at heart.

To hear that underground beats are even on the designer's radar is somewhat of a shock, as Webster gave birth to baby girl Bibi just two weeks ago. Today though, the accessories star was (sans rave-wear) in the party spirit as show goer's delved tentatively into her fantasy club land in the Waterloo vaults. From electric camo prints to warrior girl flourishes, here are five spring/summer 2015 accessories we never thought we'd even have the possibility of wearing.

The bondage boot Remember the vampish black Tom Ford boots seen wrapped around the legs of Rihanna and Anne Hathaway? Sophia Webster's hit the same dominatrix note, but in a neon, I've-just-come-back-from-Brighton-pride kind of way.

READ: London Fashion Week Live

Printed knee pads Should one fall over in da club, Webster's knee pads will stop a nasty bruise ensuing. Handy for knee slides across the dance floor, one would also imagine.

The builder's belt Never has there been a holdall that comprises pockets for every piece of make-up you could even imagine needing. Utilitarian fashion, at its rave best.

Fruit printed fans Fashionistas might have been going bananas for the shoes, bikinis and bags emblazoned with the peeled back yellow fruit, but the whole collection was a veritable fruit basket full of ideas. Keep yourself cool with a melon speckled fan!

String trousers String vests are so Nineties Ibiza; shred a pair of trews and embrace the fact that everyone can see your banana printed pants.

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5 unusual rave accessories Sophia Webster predicts we'll be wearing for spring/summer 2015

Liverpool Freshers’ Week 2014: Find out what’s on across Merseyside

Its that time of year again, when a new wave of freshers descend on Liverpool ready to start an important new chapter in their lives.

If youre one of them, first of all well done on choosing a fantastic place to study.

Secondly, before all the hard work begins, let your hair down and have fun at one of the many freshers' events happening across the city.

Heres whats the four universities have in store:

University of Liverpool

The Liverpool Guild of Students is hosting a welcome week for freshers, from September 20-28.

It all kicks off with a welcome party on Saturday 20 at Liverpool Guild of Students, with resident DJs from 10pm.

On Sunday 21, BBC Radio 1 DJ Zane Lowe is on the decks at Mountford Hall, Courtyard and The Street and the same venue hosts a giant quiz for 900 students, on Tuesday 23.

Other highlights include a set by BBC Radio 1s Rock Show DJ Daniel P Carter at The Afterparty, on Friday 26 at Liverpool Guild of Students and live comedy from Russell Kane at Mountford Hall on Sunday 28.

Russell Kane is performing in Liverpool during Freshers' Week

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Liverpool Freshers' Week 2014: Find out what's on across Merseyside

How MDMA Affects Empathy

According to lore, in the early 1980s, an enterprising drug distributor in Los Angeles was trying to build a street market for the chemical compound MDMA. It seemed like a promising product MDMA floods the brain with serotonin, a neurotransmitter associated with feelings of happiness. Users reported feeling euphoric, appreciating lights and music in a new way, and a rush of emotional intimacy. MDMA was starting to catch on as a club drug, but if it was going to be big, it would need a catchier name.

With partygoers in mind, the dealer coined the name Ecstasy. Empathy, he reportedly said, would be more appropriate, but how many people know what it means?

Ecstasy gained a foothold in Texas and took Europe by storm via the clubs of Ibiza, eventually migrating back to the U.S. to fuel the emerging rave scene. MDMA was finally made illegal in 1985, but continued to gain popularity over the following decades, eventually peaking in the 2000s. As the media took notice, cover stories about its dangers proliferated. And as Miley Cyrus can attest, the drug has fully caught on as a mainstream party supplement.

But in the last few years, a less hedonistic feature of the drugits apparent ability to make people more empathetichas been receiving sober study from scientists and doctors. The new interest is driven by a question that was first asked by Bay Area psychiatrists experimenting with the drug in the 1970s: Can MDMA, under the right circumstances, be good for us?

Its a fascinating time to be studying these types of drug effects, says Dr. Gillinder Bedi, an Assistant Professor of Clinical Psychology at Columbia University. Bedi first became interested in MDMA as a doctoral student in Australia, where ecstasy use is relatively common. Talking to ecstasy users, she was struck by reports that the drug induced feelings of friendliness and sociability. When I got the opportunity to work in a lab that could administer MDMA to humans, I jumped at the opportunity to see if we could look at these effects in the lab.

Over the last decade, Bedi has studied various facets of the drug: its effects on emotion and mood, the role played by a users environment (a throbbing club, for example), and unavoidably, its unwanted side effects. Many of the negative side effects of ecstasy use are already well-documented: studies suggest that heavy or even moderate MDMA use can impair memory, cause cognitive problems, or even permanently reduce the brains sensitivity to serotonin. Bedis research has also contributed to our knowledge of these effects, and how to possibly minimize them in therapeutic users.

In a 2010 study, Bedi tested the effects of ecstasy against methamphetamine and a placebo to see if MDMA really does increase empathy. After taking a dose of one of the substances, each subject reported on his or her emotions and mood, and performed tasks that involved identifying emotions in other people from pictures of their faces, or voice recordings.

One finding that is very consistent is that MDMA generates feelings related to sociabilitythings like feeling loving, trusting, friendly, playful, and sociable. This might not be news to the recreational ecstasy user, but research like Bedis is bringing a new level of scientific rigor to the study of the subject. Its been fascinating to see how these effects, which were once just anecdotal drug folklore, show up in blinded, placebo controlled studies, says Bedi.

These experiments are providing new evidence for doctors who think MDMA could be used as an aid in therapy. In South Carolina, Dr. Michael Mithoefer has been conducting small, government-approved studies to explore whether the emotional effects of MDMA can play a role in therapy sessions with war veterans suffering from severe post-traumatic stress disorder. His initial results suggest that MDMA could be more effective in these cases than Zoloft, one of the most frequently prescribed antidepressants. Mithoefers studies are part of an $18-million effort by a nonprofit called the Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies to make MDMA an FDA-regulated prescription medicine by 2021. MAPS has also funded studies of MDMA-assisted therapy for autism spectrum adults with severe social anxiety and terminal cancer patients.

Researchers believe empathy to have two main components. Cognitive empathy is the ability to perceive what other people are feeling; affective empathy is the ability to actually share in those feelings on a visceral level. In full-fledged empathy, both of these abilities are working in tandem. But the effects Dr. Bedi sees in the labthe increased friendliness and sociabilitydont seem to add up to an across-the-board increase in both kinds of empathy.

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How MDMA Affects Empathy