Bside Incoming: Lu*cy

Bside Incoming: Lu*cy We have another lovely chance to share some music from the Bside Team: This time we are delving into the collection of a fellow music lover; a very talented musician and vocalist with a residency playing acoustic sets at The Record Factory; and beyond being a valued member of the team she is quickly becoming the voice of Bside: Lu*cy Few are more in tune with the industry: As an artist liaison at Scotland’s biggest dance music festivals like FLY and Terminal V, as well as in the sunny Algarve with Afro Nation. She has experience with the management and logistics at the MTV EMA’s. And has risen through the ranks at Glasgows beloved institution Sub Club, from a keen member of the crowd to PR and working the door, and now proving her worth as personal assistant of the club’s director. Lu*cy is gonna ease us into her Sunday selections with charity shop finds and cherished classics from the likes of Dire Straits, Bowie, Prince, Donna Summers and Gloria Gaynor. Before moving things up a notch with the spine tingling picture painted of Sub Club to the back drop of Dominic Capello’s Rain, video game inspired far eastern house by Soichi Terrada, and of course a huge remix of Like a Virgin. Lu*cy instagram - https://www.instagram.com/lucyharrower/ Thanks to Molly Hickey for the beautiful artwork as always. www.instagram.com/mollyth.art/ Follow the Bside instagram for updates/news/vinyl and general music chat - www.instagram.com/bsidepodcasts/

Om Podcasten

Bside podcasts DJ's showcase and speak a little about their favourite tracks from the B-side of their records. We endeavour to broadcast the best of the B-side: a bi-weekly invitation into the impressive record collections of some of our favourite selectors. An exploration into the the back-catalogues, the deepest depths, the darkest crevices of their collections. Returning with the spoils of this venture: their most cherished records and hidden gems, from the go-to club weapons to the rarely heard home-listening records, and everything in between. Music is for sharing. 'By the early sixties, the song on the A-side was the 'hit' song that the record company wanted radio stations to play. The B-side would contain less radio friendly and less popular tracks. In our eyes the B-side is a true reflection of the producers taste in music, there is more personality on that side of the record'.