
Get tickets and full event details
Music to Come and Trinity Centre present:
Pssound System
PSST DJS ~ OJOO, Catherine Danger and Daya
Black Obsidian Sound System DJs
i-sha and k means
A night of experimental and radical sound on Friday 5th June, upstairs at Trinity Centre.
Bringing their sound system over from Brussels for the event, the Psst Mlle crew will merge with Black Obsidian Sound System DJs (London), joined by local legends i-sha and k-means, to bring marginalised genders artists front stage and deconstruct the dancefloor.
The event warms up from 7-10pm with DJs in Trinity’s garden, and then moves upstairs inside from 10-3am.
advanced tickets £12 / £15 / o.t.d £20
Limited early birds available for £9
About Psst
Psst was founded in 2018 by Souria Cheurfi as an intersectional feminist platform tackling racial, gender and economic discriminations by focusing on inclusion and representation in nightlife. To do so, the crew built their sound system Pssound.
“The Pssound is born from a collective and political process. For the sake of coherence, and to counterbalance the predominance of white men in Belgium's musical scene - particularly sound system culture - we feel it's important that it retains its political and collective vocation. So we want it to be shared within marginalised communities - the communities that built it. [...] our approach as an intersectional feminist collective is deeply anti-racist and anti-colonial. Given the historical context in which sound system culture was born and the powerful symbol it has represented in the struggles of Black and Caribbean communities in the UK, we want to prioritise projects featuring people of Caribbean origin and, more broadly, of Afro descent. “
From Psst Manifesto
About Black Obsidian Sound System
BOSS is a Black Queer/Trans led soundsystem from London, which was established in the summer of 2018 with the intention of bringing together a community of queer, trans and non-binary people of colour involved in art, sound and radical activism. Following the legacies of sound system culture, they set out to learn, build and sustain a resource for our collective struggles. Members of the collective include: Adedamola Bajomo, Kiera Coward Deyell, Phoebe Collings-James, Evan Ifekoya, Onyeka Igwe, Marcus Macdonald, Shamica Ruddock, Shenece Oretha and Gin Wilson.