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Slam (band) |
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Slam are a
DJs Stuart and Orde’s first 'real' club event was a weekly Thursday night called Black Market in Glasgow club Fury Murrys. They played a mix of house, funk and rap to a keen following of Art School students and West End luminaries. Dave Clarke, a partner in Slam and Soma to this day, was their PR manager.
In early 1988 they were approached by then fashion designer Steven Sleepman (AKA Steven Workman), after he heard his first Acid House track on DJ Segun’s late night show on Radio Clyde. Steven had been waiting since punk rock for the ‘next big thing’ and Acid House was it. During a brief stint PRing for Club Eden, Steven secured a Saturday night at Glasgow's Tin Pan Alley which was to become the home of Slam. The club instantly became one of the UK’s biggest acid house nights with followers from Manchester to Aberdeen. The club was unique, not only in its music policy, but in its professional approach to marketing and the content of the night. Go go dancers, performance artists, one-off merchandise, free fruit, wall-to-wall banners and projections all added to the club’s reputation. Dot Allison (future musical collaborator) worked with the PR team prior to the launch of her musical career and DJ Harri was a regular guest on the turntables.
Steven became an equal partner in Black Market as part of the deal, working with Dave on PR and promotion for both nights. Slam then quickly launched a Friday night at the legendary Sub Club called Joy, riding on the success of Slam and the acid house scene. Black Market still kept it’s own musical identity throughout the Summer of Love playing an eclectic mix of musical genres.
Steven finally left all three nights in a mutually agreed buy out. Shortly after, Tennants Lager’s marketing agency approached Slam with a sponsorship deal to tour Scotland’s upfront clubs over a period of two years. Steven came back for two years to work on PR, creative and to manage the tour. The tour ultimately led to Slam’s residency at T in the Park and increased Slam’s profile nationwide.
Slam have released numerous singles since the mid-1990s, their most known being 'Positive Education', 'Eterna' and 'Lifetimes'. The last song to be played at the very last Slam at the Arches was 'The Bells' by Jeff Mills. The second to last song was 'Positive Education' by Slam.
They co-founded
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