The Post

Gathering unites New Zealand techno tribes

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Before Rhythm and Vines became a must-do music event for many Kiwis on New Year’s Eve, there was The Gathering – a groove festival that drew thousands to a tree-fringed meadow atop Takaka Hill, near Nelson. Matt Stewart remembers the party 20 years on.

By the early 1990s, New Zealand’s undergroun­d electronic dance culture had matured with pioneering clubs like Wellington’s Naked Angel and Auckland’s Box bringing the sound and energy of British and American rave and club music to urban dance floors.

By the middle of the decade, the music and its various genres had their own scenes, clubs, parties and subculture­s, with a now enviable roster of the world’s top DJs and producers regularly playing the main centres – from the likes of DJ Sneak, Ian Pooley and Derrick Carter to Hardfloor, Basement Jaxx and Derrick May.

But it wasn’t until ‘‘The Gathering’’ that all the various beat disciples – the ravers, house junkies, junglists and techno heads had a place they could get down en masse, and in glorious isolation.

On New Year’s Eve 1997/98, about 9000 of them converged, uniting at Canaan Downs on Takaka Hill, near Nelson, in the festival’s second edition.

As the (largely) booze-free party loomed, in December 1997, The Dominion mused on a youth culture undergoing evolution.

The newspaper reported that more than 48 hours and five stages, 200 acts and DJs from New Zealand, Britain, Japan and Germany would be spinning musical styles including ‘‘dub, hip-hop, reggae, drum and bass, trance, techno, house and funk’’.

‘‘If these sound unfamiliar, it’s probably an indication of the changing youth culture which is turning away from guitar-oriented sounds to those of a more electronic nature,’’ reporter Anna Fyfe wrote.

Organiser Grant Smithies told Fyfe at the time: ‘‘It’s a significan­t thing for New Zealanders that people are starting to participat­e in the vibe of dance music.

‘‘New Zealand men used to be the type that needed to get drunk before they would dance. Even then, it would be a sort of shuffle from side to side. The main difference between the dance culture and guitar culture is participat­ion.’’

By the time me and my pals arrived at the 97/98 Gathering, we were primed to participat­e having driven from Wellington buoyed by United Kingdom DJs Sasha and John Digweed’s now seminal prog house mix album, Northern Exposure.

We set up our tents and got ready as Daft Punk’s Homework album was thrashed from various boomboxes and car stereos around the camp.

From there, the weekend was a hedonistic blur spent mostly throwing shapes in the bouncy glow of the house tent or hypnotical­ly grooving in the main outdoor trance zone.

For much of the 48 hours I also recall hallucinog­enic ramblings through the fairylit forested micro-gullies that encircled the zone while talking cosmic cobblers to happy strangers and friends alike.

Gathering 97/98 organiser and site manager Josephine Cachemaill­e said the lack of alcohol had a huge impact on the feeling of the party, allowing gatherers – especially women – the freedom to lose themselves in the sensuous surrounds without any boozefuell­ed aggro.

The peaceful sense of safety also meant the festival’s atmosphere – with its policy of harm reduction – was conducive to anyone taking recreation­al drugs. ‘‘You could really have seriously good fun and it stayed like that ... it was a happy, positive, collective experience,’’ Cachemaill­e said of the festival, which ran between 1996 and 2002.

After the 97/98 event, then 26-year-old Amanda Spiers told The Nelson Mail that the party had boosted her selfconfid­ence. ‘‘I’m going to go away from here feeling it has probably changed my life. I just feel a lot more positive, it’s a real nurturing place.’’

Organiser and Gathering documentar­y producer Alison Green said the crew, artists and punters had created magic at Canaan Downs.

‘‘We were up in the middle of nowhere so we had to bring every plug and lightbulb and we created this whole magical world where people behaved the best they could be,’’ Green said.

‘‘People could create, dance, hang out and have fun. It was one of the highlights of my life and I’m very proud to have been a part of it.’’

●➤ Watch The Gathering 97/98 documentar­y at: youtube.com/watch? v=nILutg70LK­I&t=346s

"People could create, dance, hang out and have fun. It was one of the highlights of my life and I’m very proud to have been a part of it." Gathering organiser Alison Green

 ?? PHOTO/GRANT ELLIS PHOTO/ALISON GREEN ?? The Golden Gate techno totem in the main trance zone. Festival-goers groove in the trance zone during The Gathering 1997/98.
PHOTO/GRANT ELLIS PHOTO/ALISON GREEN The Golden Gate techno totem in the main trance zone. Festival-goers groove in the trance zone during The Gathering 1997/98.
 ??  ?? Matt Stewart, far left, relaxes with friends Rich, Jess and Norm before The Gathering New Year’s Eve dance party of 1997/98 at Canaan Downs on Takaka Hill.
Matt Stewart, far left, relaxes with friends Rich, Jess and Norm before The Gathering New Year’s Eve dance party of 1997/98 at Canaan Downs on Takaka Hill.
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 ??  ?? At right: Event organiser Josephine Cachemaill­e says the lack of alcohol had a huge impact on the feeling of the party. PHOTO: KAWZ PRODUCTION­S
At right: Event organiser Josephine Cachemaill­e says the lack of alcohol had a huge impact on the feeling of the party. PHOTO: KAWZ PRODUCTION­S

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