DJs and dancers of a bygone era gather at Elsewhere to celebrate the storied club's 41st anniversary.
The event featured just two DJs: Joey Llanos and David DePino, who have spearheaded the reunion parties in the past five years. Both men studied under Levan and performed regularly at Paradise Garage in its heyday. At Elsewhere, they went back-to-back all night, seamlessly swapping out disco hits for slower soul, with Llanos leaning towards dark, dubby funk (a signature style popularized by Levan) and DePino preferring warmer disco tunes. This was an old-school night through and through, with most tracks coming from a large CD binder filled with nothing but the hits: George Benson's "Give Me The Night," Jackie Moore's "This Time Baby" and deep cuts like David Joseph's "You Can't Hide (Your Love From Me)." The soundsystem was impressively adept at handling Llanos and DePino's mixing style, which favored using the EQs to build tension before blasting the bass all the way up during a chorus or soulful refrain.


Beyond the musical nostalgia, the event stood out because of the crowd's overwhelming positivity. Though the average age was considerably older than the standard Elsewhere audience, the dance floor was more alive than I had ever seen it. Illuminated by the house lights, which filled the main hall with dayglo brightness, dancers filled every inch of the venue's three levels, dancing like it might be the last time they hear tunes such as Pleasure's "Take A Chance" or Colonel Abrams' "Music Is The Answer." Almost every track was met with unbridled enthusiasm—deafening cheers, gym whistles, tambourines and hand drums.
More than just a reunion for DePino and Llanos, the party was a long-awaited reunion for a crowd that started partying almost a half-century ago. It was a space to reconnect and make new memories. I heard partygoers introducing old friends to their spouses, remarking that they hadn't seen each other since "the last reunion." There were spontaneous drum circles, and even more spontaneous embraces. Rather than mourning the loss of Levan and the many other legendary DJs who played the club before it closed in 1987, everyone used the dance floor to, once again, worship at the altar of Levan's never-ending "Saturday Mass."
Photo credit /
Luis Nieto Dickens</a> </span>
from RA - Event Reviews Resident Advisor

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