Berghain

Berghain (German pronunciation: [bɛɐ̯k.haɪn]) is a nightclub in Berlin, Germany. It is named after its location near the border between Kreuzberg and Friedrichshain in Berlin, and is a short walk from Berlin Ostbahnhof main line railway station.[1] An American journalist described Berghain in 2007 as "quite possibly the current world capital of techno, much as E-Werk or Tresor were in their respective heydays".[2]

Berghain
The Berghain nightclub building
Former namesOstgut (1998–2003)
AddressAm Wriezener Bahnhof
LocationFriedrichshain, Berlin, Germany
Coordinates52°30′40″N 13°26′35″E
TypeNightclub
Capacity1,500
Opened2004 (2004)

History

The sign for Ostgut

Berghain is the reincarnation of the "legendary" Ostgut club (1998–2003)[2][3][4] and emerged from a male-only fetish night club called Snax, which was held in different locations before it found its permanent home at Ostgut. Ostgut became a focal point of Berlin's techno subculture after the venue was opened to the general public on regular nights, while the exclusive Snax nights continued to be held six to eight times a year.

Ostgut eventually closed on January 6, 2003, following a 30-hour farewell event. The former railway warehouse that housed the club was subsequently demolished. Berghain then opened in 2004.[4][5] The name "Berghain" is a portmanteau of the names of the two city quarters that flank the south and north sides of the building in which the club is housed: Kreuzberg (formerly in West Berlin) and Friedrichshain (formerly in East Berlin). The literal meaning of the German word Berghain is "mountain grove".

The Snax event is still held twice a year on Holy Saturday and in November. As Minneapolis-born DJ and producer Dustin Zahn, who performed a DJ set at the 2013 Snax party, explained: "Once a year in honor of the old Ostgut tradition, Berghain closes its doors to the straight crowd and unleashes a no-holds-barred gay marathon where anything goes."[6] Located in the same building is the famous Berlin gay sex club Lab.Oratory, which draws an international crowd and exhibits a more intense hedonism than Berghain.[7]

Berghain's head doorman, Sven Marquardt, is also known as a photographer.[8]

The management announced their decision to close the Berghain until 20 April 2020 as a consequence of the COVID-19 pandemic.[9]

Nightclub

View from below towards the main dancefloor

The club is located in a former power plant (originally rented from the energy company Vattenfall[10]) in Friedrichshain, near Berlin Ostbahnhof railway station. In 2011 the building was bought from Vattenfall and is now owned outright.[11] The building is remarkable for its enormous dimensions and accommodates an 18 metre dance floor and space for 1,500 guests. The interior's minimalist design is dominated by steel and concrete.

The club contains a "cavernous" main room, as well as a smaller upstairs space called Panorama Bar. It is decorated with large-scale Wolfgang Tillmans photographs and features tall windows with a view of East Berlin.[1][2][3][4][12] In 2007 only half of the building was in use.[2]

Berghain/Panorama Bar was nominated for Club of the Year at the 2017 Electronic Music Awards.

Berghain sports a Funktion-One sound system on its main dancefloor which, at the time it was installed in 2004, was one of the company's largest club installs.[13] At its launch, the sound system comprised four Funktion-One Dance Stacks (consisting of a DS210, a DS215 and three F218), one Double Infrahorn (consisting of two Infrabass, one Doublehorn Extension) and two Resolution 2 for monitoring.[14] The Panorama Bar was upgraded in 2007 with a four-point line-array system with an additional six subwoofers from Studt Akustik.[15]

Culture

Over the course of its existence, Berghain has become associated with decadence and hedonism. A 2006 New Zealand Herald article describes "people openly indulging in sexual acts"[16] inside the club, with the building, at the time, containing several dark rooms specifically set aside for such activity. The Guardian writer Helen Pidd stated in a 2008 article, "[Walk] past the booths on the ground floor and you're sure to see a bare bottom or 10".[2][17] Photography is strictly forbidden inside Berghain,[2][18] and no mirrors or reflecting surfaces can be found anywhere in the club.

Berghain is also renowned for its lengthy opening hours. As Pidd wrote in 2008, "[No] one arrives before 4am, and most stay until well past teatime".[2][17]

Record label

Panorama Bar resident Cassy

In 2005, Berghain's owners started a record label named Ostgut Ton.[2][19] The label's first releases were by Berghain/Panorama Bar DJ residents, such as Marcel Dettmann, Cassy and Ben Klock. The music released by the label is mostly techno, tech house, Detroit techno and minimal techno. Nick Höppner, a resident DJ who founded and managed the label until December 2012,[20] stated in 2007: "The simple division is that Panorama Bar more or less caters to house ... and Berghain is really the platform for purist techno."[2] Jenus Baumecker-Kahmke succeeded Höppner as the label's manager but stepped down in January 2018. The position was the taken over by A.J. Samuels, who also manages Ostgut Ton's two sublabels, Unterton and A-Ton.

In 2007 Berghain collaborated with the Berlin State Ballet to create Shut Up and Dance! Updated, a ballet for five dancers that was performed at the club in late June and early July of that year.[21][22] The ballet's soundtrack, released on Ostgut Ton on May 29, 2007,[22] is made up of five specially composed tracks by prominent minimal techno artists, such as Luciano, Âme, Sleeparchive and Luke Slater (The 7th Plain).[23] The soundtrack received some positive reviews,[19][24] including a five-star review in The Guardian,[25] while the ballet itself received bad notices from Resident Advisor (RA) magazine.[26]

In October 2010 the label released a five-year anniversary compilation titled Fünf, for which field recordings from within the club were used as the basis for the two-disc collection. Höppner further explained the concept behind the compilation in an August 2010 interview:

Well, it wasn't really my idea ... I didn't like the thought of doing it like everyone else–maybe a mix through the back catalog and a few exclusive new tracks by some key artists... I wanted something more special. Then a while ago I met Emika, she's making music herself on Ninja Tune. We sat together one day last summer and she told me about her last visit to Berghain. It was a regular Sunday morning and she noticed how everything in the building was resonating and vibrating and swinging and humming–she realized that there were a lot of sounds coming from the building itself. That led to the idea of doing field recordings within the building while it's not open to the public ... It took about two or three weeks ... It was a four gigabyte library.[20]

Höppner also spoke about the label's artist roster and sales performance, stating that many people who submit recordings are turned down due to there being "so many in-house artists", while the label, at that time, was selling more product than other labels, but was not generating a large profit margin. Regarding the period from 2010 to 2015, Höppner said: "Everyone has his tastes and a very high standard of quality. Just maintaining this level of quality is our ambition I guess. Keep it interesting, and whatever that might actually mean remains to be seen."[20]

Recognition

DJ Magazine's top 100 Clubs

Berghain first entered DJ Magazine's Top 100 Clubs list in 2008, ranking at number 20, and reached the top position in the following year.[27]

Position by year

Year Position Notes Ref.
2008 20 New Entry [28]
2009 1 N/A [29]
2010 8 N/A [30]
2011 6 N/A [31]
2012 13 N/A [32]
2013 18 N/A [33]
2014 14 N/A [34]
2015 13 N/A [35]
2016 16 N/A [36]
2017 12 N/A [37]
2018 10 N/A [38]
2019 10 N/A [39]
2020 8 N/A [40]

International Dance Music Awards

Year Category Work Result Ref.
2010 Best Global Club Berghain - Berlin, Germany Nominated [41]
2012 Nominated [42]
2013 Nominated [43]
2014 Nominated [44]
2015 Nominated [45]
2016 Nominated [46]
2020 Nominated [47]
gollark: No, I do not.
gollark: It's not my *claim*.
gollark: Anyway, I won't get it to target i_dr_delicious, it is not my problem.
gollark: Look, it even says so.
gollark: You mean the traffic light, <@!441222270724210709>?

See also

  • Media related to Berghain at Wikimedia Commons
  • List of electronic dance music venues
  • Superclub

References

  1. Panoramabar: Berlin's Underworld | XLR8R Archived 2008-02-08 at the Wayback Machine
  2. Sherburne, Philip (2007-05-09). "The Month In: Techno". Pitchfork Media. Retrieved 2007-07-04.
  3. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2006-05-15. Retrieved 2007-08-18.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  4. Wang, Daniel (2004-10-01). "Ostgut, Berlin: Daniel Wang's scene report from the German capital". Discopia. Retrieved 2007-07-04.
  5. "Berlin electro club Berghain turns two". The Berlin Paper. 2006-12-16. Archived from the original on 2007-07-05. Retrieved 2007-07-04.
  6. "Live from Berghain [Snax Party] (30-03-13)" (Audio upload). Dustin Zahn on SoundCloud. SoundCloud. May 2013. Retrieved 9 April 2014.
  7. "Lab.Oratory Berlin". www.lab-oratory.de. Archived from the original on 2019-12-03. Retrieved 2020-06-30.
  8. Helm, Burt (25 July 2015). "How the Bouncer of Berghain Chooses Who Gets Into the Most Depraved Party on the Planet".
  9. "Berghain schließt bis 20. April – Müller kritisiert Merkel" Tagesspiegel, 3. march 2020
  10. Andreas Tzortzis (1 May 2007). "In Berlin, art among the ruins". The New York Times. Retrieved 9 April 2014.
  11. Balzer, Jens (2012-08-15). "Berghain: Dies wäre Ihr Klub gewesen". fr-online.de (in German). Retrieved 2016-07-09.
  12. Trebay, Guy (2006-03-19). "Life Is a Cabaret?: At Week End, the party never stops". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Archived from the original on 2007-08-12. Retrieved 2007-07-04.
  13. Mahrt, Emin (August 2011). "The Story of Funktion One". Proud Magazine.
  14. "Berghain". mondo*dr magazine: 76–78. July–August 2005.
  15. "Berghain's Panorama Bar Has A New Soundsystem". Electronic Beats. August 2017.
  16. Battersby, Shandelle (2006-10-19). "Ich bin ein NZer". The New Zealand Herald.
  17. Pidd, Helen (9 January 2008). "Last night a cellist saved my life". The Guardian. Retrieved 9 April 2014. Berlin's Berghain club is known for many things: its hardcore opening hours (starting from Saturday it stays open until Monday noon), its DJs (who play some of the best techno in Europe), and its relaxed attitude towards sex in public (walk past the booths on the ground floor and you're sure to see a bare bottom or 10).
  18. "New Cassy mix captures Panoramabar". Resident Advisor. 2006-07-09. Retrieved 2007-07-04.
  19. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2008-01-04. Retrieved 2007-08-18.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  20. "Marcel Dettmann, SCB, Tama Sumo and others all contribute tracks to the Berlin label's new compilation". Resident Advisor. Resident Advisor Ltd. 26 August 2010. Retrieved 9 April 2014.
  21. "Spielplan Spielzeit 06-07". Staatsballett Berlin. Archived from the original on 2007-05-03. Retrieved 2007-07-04.
  22. "Shut up and dance". Resident Advisor. 2007-03-23. Retrieved 2007-07-04.
  23. "Various Artists – Shut Up And Dance! Updated". inthemix.com.au. 2007-06-07. Archived from the original on 2007-09-30. Retrieved 2007-07-04.
  24. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2007-08-24. Retrieved 2007-08-18.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  25. Macpherson, Alex (2007-05-25). "Various Artists, Shut up and Dance!". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 2007-07-04.
  26. Janet Leyton-Grant; Enrico Nawrath (27 June 2007). "Shut Up and Dance!". Resident Advisor. Resident Advisor Ltd. Retrieved 9 April 2014.
  27. Christopher Lawton (27 June 2011). "The Berlin Night Life: Dark...and Cool". Wall Street Journal. Retrieved 9 April 2014.
  28. "Top 100 Clubs 2008". DJMagazine.
  29. "Top 100 Clubs 2009". DJMagazine.
  30. "Top 100 Clubs 2010". DJMagazine.
  31. "Top 100 Clubs 2011". DJMagazine.
  32. "Top 100 Clubs 2012". DJMagazine.
  33. "Top 100 Clubs 2013". DJMagazine.
  34. "Top 100 Clubs 2014". DJMagazine.
  35. "Top 100 Clubs 2015". DJMagazine.
  36. "Top 100 Clubs 2016". DJMagazine.
  37. "Top 100 Clubs 2017". DJMagazine.
  38. "Top 100 Clubs 2018". DJMagazine.
  39. "Top 100 Clubs 2019". DJMagazine.
  40. "Top 100 Clubs 2020". DJMagazine.
  41. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2018-09-02. Retrieved 2018-09-02.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  42. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2012-02-01. Retrieved 2018-11-06.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  43. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2013-03-07. Retrieved 2018-09-02.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  44. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2014-03-12. Retrieved 2018-09-02.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  45. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2017-04-06. Retrieved 2018-09-02.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  46. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2016-06-30. Retrieved 2018-09-02.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  47. https://weraveyou.com/2020/04/idma-2020-winners-announced-aviciis-tim-named-as-the-best-album/

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