Forums › Rave › Party Reports › Briston Hall Party
well what a strange fucking night this was, sorted out to go to a hall party that was in aid of the stack getting a new lighting system, all was going fine until about 12/1ish when my mates said the pigs turned up and asked for the music to be turned down, naturally the only response was no, the owner of the building turned all power to the sockets off and turned the lights on, fights broke out, and then eneded up walking home with my mate alex for the next 4 hours, in this time i spent quite alot of time on the phone to my mum and trying to make ciggys (many of which i ripped to bits or didnt have enough spit to lick the rizla,) we even had time to crush a disco biscuit in the middle of the road and partake in some l8 night sniffing activities (I SAID SNIFFING NOT DOGGING) now just chilling at home and putting the world to rights,
ps had more fun tripping on the way home at this suposed hall party
sounds a shame about the party,
atleast you seem to have enjoyed your walk home :bounce_fl
glad to hear you made the best of it, but its a shame the party ended in this fashion.
12/1am appears to be the standard time for legal music events in East Anglia to close down, unless the venue has got an extended license (which needs to be sorted out in advance).
As an exiled Londoner I consider it way too early (its 4-6am in many London venues and 2-4am in SE England) but thats what people democratically voted for here in the local Councils, If people disagree with the closedown time of a legal venue the only accepted way is to lobby the media and Council.
I think you can also get a TENS license for an extension in some areas.
I’m sure ravers aren’t the only people who hire village halls and would like the event to go on a bit longer sometimes, but everyone else seems prepared to work within the rules. The other problem is that village halls tend to be quite near residential areas (at least the ones round here are..) as many were around before everyone had cars or have been situated in a place where all the community can get to including kids/old people)
Somewhere in the agreement signed for hiring the hall (or as a notice somewhere) it probably stated that the event should stop by a certain time, and the cops (working with the council environmental health) are within their powers to ask the event to cease for any reason they consider reasonable. They could close down Eastern Haze or Pams House at whatever time they choose if they had a good enough reason!
The hall manager and cops were carrying out the standard procedure to enforce the licensing laws, if incidents of disorder then broke out it goes down as a black mark associated with these sorts of events.
On my side of the Waveney Suffolk Constabulary now consider hall parties to be a “potential source of disorder” and no longer permit them to happen..
i know what your saying and i totally respect that fact that people live round the area, i stayed and helped clean up, i got involved with conversations that people was having with the police trying to bring the tone down(people bitching at them) i understand that they wanted the music turned off but just turning the music of and the lights straight on was not a good idea in my book, atleast turn it down enough so people get the general idea and leave themselves
fair play to you, we need more people like that round here
I agree with that but a lot of people would try to sneak in one or two more tunes and it becomes a license breach (there are often always neighbours who are prepared to take their whinge all the way to the Council chambers and it could cost the hall its license)
Also if people were fighting this sounds more like people attended that hall party who were planning to fight anyway and were just looking for an excuse.
IMO they shouldn’t have been there in the first place, if they were that determined to solve their problems by violence they should have had their fight in town/city and not baited up the hall party!
the reason the cops once gave raves/hall parties a bit more leeway is because some of the more pragmatic ones realised they could be less trouble and hassle than the normal accepted nightlife!
However if people close the gap and make raves look just as bad as the rest of the binge drinking culture they will get controlled and clamped down on even harder as the organisers aren’t contributing to the “social costs” through tax and licensing fees…
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Forums › Rave › Party Reports › Briston Hall Party