15 comments

  • EastLondonCoder9 days ago
    A few concrete mechanisms that made this work (happy to expand):<p><pre><code> * “Host layer”: greeting newcomers + making it safe to arrive alone mattered more than we expected. * Curation as governance: coherent music changes how people behave in the room. * Offline outreach outperformed posting: visiting local businesses in person built trust faster than Instagram. * Scale changes the social physics; we stayed small on purpose. </code></pre> Curious if anyone here has built local repeatable formats (meetups, reading groups, hackerspaces), what made them stick?
  • tomcam9 days ago
    &gt; early on we needed Instagram content that could show music visually without filming crowds in a club. We started filming headphone-walk clips: one person, headphones on, walking through town to a track we chose.<p>Brilliant. Fantastic example of constraints producing richly creative results.
    • EastLondonCoder8 days ago
      Thanks. The idea came from trying to visualise “listening to music” in a way that actually works on social media without filming crowds inside a club. The constraint forced a better format.
  • grokx9 days ago
    A few years ago, I started again to attend regularly to concerts, and often in small &#x2F; mid size local rooms, with an audience from perhaps 50 to a few hundred people.<p>Those are much more meaningful to me than those giant stadiums where you watch the band on giant screens. These thoughts will seem obvious, but smaller spaces with a limited audience are really warmer. You feel much closer to the artists, you are sharing emotions, sometimes the artist comes playing or singing in the middle of the audience. Things happen! A guitar string breaks, a drum falls, the singer goes out of tune. This is real live music!
    • EastLondonCoder7 days ago
      We do agree with this, we both prefer attending small gigs ourselves for that exact reason. Also, all bands has to start somewhere, it takes many small gigs to create an audience and develop their craft. Writing and producing songs is one thing but there is no substitution to the experience to see what moves in people listening live. The majority big stadium bands started with endless small non paying gigs, this is the foundation of the music business.
    • direwolf209 days ago
      raves are also severely underrated among autistic nerds
  • proxysna8 days ago
    Sick, nice to see something like that in the neighborhood. Too late for me to pay a visit today, but see you in 4 weeks!
    • EastLondonCoder7 days ago
      You’re very welcome! Next one is Feb 27: Sydney Valette (Paris) + Coppia (Eskilstuna).<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;sydneyvalette.bandcamp.com&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;sydneyvalette.bandcamp.com&#x2F;</a> <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;coppia.bandcamp.com&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;coppia.bandcamp.com&#x2F;</a>
  • thisislife28 days ago
    Why This Kolaveri, Kolaveri, Kolaveri Di - <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.youtube.com&#x2F;watch?v=YR12Z8f1Dh8" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.youtube.com&#x2F;watch?v=YR12Z8f1Dh8</a> (sorry, couldn&#x27;t resist ;).
  • yakshaving_jgt8 days ago
    &gt; See you in the smoke &amp; haze<p>Aha, I recognise this as a direct translation of what I used to see DJs and club promoters writing in GBG and Sthlm — ses i dimman!
    • EastLondonCoder7 days ago
      Haha, almost, we add an extra word and some signifiers.<p>&quot;Vi ses i röken och dimman! &quot;<p>It actually means something specific. We tend to use a smoke machine a lot on our nights, one time the police showed up because they thought the place was on fire. The symbols at the end signifies the electricity of nights and the headphones is of course a reference to our social media headphone walks.<p>This is fixed catchphrase we use in all our communications.
  • mellosouls8 days ago
    This is a very different ShowHN and I love it.<p>Best of luck going forward.
  • ks20488 days ago
    How did you choose the name? (I know Colibrí is hummingbird in Spanish - here in Guatemala, lot&#x27;s of places with Colibri in the name).
    • EastLondonCoder7 days ago
      As the other poster commented Kolibri is hummingbird in Swedish. The name was inspired by 2 things. A feeling of lightness and ease connected with carefree summer nights and also the intros of all versions of pacific by 808 state.
    • zyber8 days ago
      Kolibri is hummingbird in Swedish as well
  • timc39 days ago
    Might travel down from Stockholm in a couple of months. Too few nights like this in Sweden (Hosoi can be quite good though).
    • EastLondonCoder8 days ago
      Nice, you’d be very welcome.<p>Strong spring lineup. Tonight is Hidden Lines, end of Feb Sydney Valette (Paris), and 20 March Liminal Project (UK) + Yugoslavia (ES) with Inåt Bakåt Records. On 11 April there’s a one-day festival in Norrköping (Kallsup, Poloklubben, Zack Zack Zack, etc.).<p>We’ve been experimenting a bit with how much we pre-announce (small room, and we don’t want to spread people too thin), but the schedule on the site is the best place to check. Instagram is our main outreach: @kolibrinkpg
  • IlPeach8 days ago
    I&#x27;m intrigued but also very confused on what this is about. Posting so I can looking into that later
    • EastLondonCoder7 days ago
      Totally fair. It’s a real monthly music night, not software.<p>The Show HN part is the site + media (so people can see the scale&#x2F;atmosphere), and the thing we’re trying to share is the operating model: how you get strangers to show up alone, feel safe, and come back, without big budgets.
    • GaryBluto8 days ago
      You can click the &#x27;favorite&#x27; button to save listings and comments for later.
  • olelele8 days ago
    Hej! Ole här, var hos er för nåt år sedan. Kul att se er här!!
    • EastLondonCoder7 days ago
      Kul att höra från dig! Det är många olika personer runt Kolibri som känner dig från Berlin som t.ex. Henrik Maneuever så det var extra kul när du besökte oss.
      • olelele5 days ago
        Kommer gärna och spelar nån gång;)
  • ChadNauseam9 days ago
    Not against AI, but I think you would find this post to be better if you didn&#x27;t use AI to write it. They are not quite at the point yet where they generate something interesting enough for most people to want to read. Additionally, it goes somewhat counter to your stated goals. You (or chatgpt) said:<p>&gt; People return when they feel recognised and when the night has a consistent identity.<p>But there&#x27;s no identity to your post, because it doesn&#x27;t feel like it was written by a person. Try writing it yourself! It’s boring, but it builds trust because it’s human, not algorithmic.<p>Anyway, congrats! I used to be a little bit into the DIY music scene in Chicago. Super cool to see other manifestations of it around the world
    • embedding-shape9 days ago
      I don&#x27;t think it&#x27;s AI, they&#x27;re just Swedes, we talk in a kind of boring way I suppose, and directly translating it into English usually makes it read kind of &quot;stiff&quot;. I don&#x27;t get the same feeling as you, but might be I&#x27;m just used to it.
      • Gooblebrai9 days ago
        It&#x27;s definitely AI. There are many tell signs
    • EastLondonCoder8 days ago
      OP here (Maria &amp; Jonatan). This took off while we were asleep.<p>Maria is the creative force and writes Swedish very well. We used ChatGPT as a bouncing board to translate&#x2F;tighten the English and get the story across. The piece reflects what we do, but in hindsight it probably ended up a bit over-polished.<p>Happy to answer questions.
    • rrr_oh_man9 days ago
      Agree.<p>The paragraph when I stopped reading:<p><i>&gt; What we built isn’t an app. It’s a repeatable local format: a standing night where strangers become regulars, centred on music rather than networking.</i>
  • lastwalz8 days ago
    [flagged]
    • fkdk8 days ago
      Is this some sort of joke&#x2F;reference I&#x27;m not getting?
      • Philpax8 days ago
        No, they&#x27;re just a troll.