62page
www.groovekorea.com / February 2014 62 O n certain nights at a little club in Hongdae, you’ll hear and see  something different from the norm. Hidden among the rows of  loud restaurants and clubs pumping out sugary sweet K-pop and  throbbing dance hits, you’ll find Club Myoung Wol Gwan — holed up in  a little building with a different kind of atmosphere. Inside, the first thing new people often notice is an interior that looks  more like a basement than a traditional club. It’s a little dark, a little  dusty and on certain nights it features a soundtrack that most clubs  would never dream of playing. This isn’t a normal club and this isn’t a normal party; this is Seoul  Shindig, where music and nostalgia keep things going long into the  night. Here, the songs of yesterday are the soundtrack that fuels the  party. A little bit of Motown, a little bit of British rock — if it’s from de- cades ago and fun to dance to, it’ll most likely be played here.  “It’s all about the love of great music, cutting loose and tearing it up  on the dance floor,” says Shindig head James (Hawkeye) Dawkins.  “When we do a ’50s and ’60s night, it’s like throwing a party in your  grandmother’s basement, listening to her old vinyl stash; a bunch of  cool people show up and everyone has an amazing time.” Originally the brainchild of Jerry Stiles (also known as Rev. Stiles) and  Mikey Harrison, Seoul Shindig is now headed by Dawkins. “We have eccentric tastes and we want Shindig to reflect that,” says  Dawkins. “We’ll play rockabilly, Motown, surf  rock, psychedelia, North- ern soul, doo-wop — all manner of stuff.”  In addition to playing a wide variety of music, Shindig has hosted  numerous themed events like tiki nights, live belly dancing and a ret- ro-themed homecoming with ’80s and ’90s music.  “There used to be this thing back in Austin, Texas, called the Second  Sunday Sockhop. It was this event that played music from the ’50s and  ’60s,” says Stiles. “I felt that, at the time (when we first started), things  weren’t being fulfilled in Seoul regarding older music.”  It was this idea that inspired Stiles and Harrison to create the first  Shindig. The event turned out to be a success and over time began  spreading through word of mouth, eventually achieving a cult following. “It was such a harebrained idea at the time. To this day, I’m still con- vinced that no one is going to show up,” says Dawkins. Stiles and Dawkins strive to make the events accessible to Koreans  and foreigners alike, stressing that Shindig is intended for everyone to  enjoy.  “Ideally, we’d love to have a 50/50 split between Koreans and West- erners, just to keep it diverse and interesting,” says Dawkins. He says that Koreans don’t always have the same nostalgia for the  songs that the expat community has, but he is still seeing more native  Koreans arrive alongside the familiar faces from the expat crowd that  MUsIC & ARTs Edited by Emilee Jennings (emilee@groovekorea.com) Seoul Shindig The most  eccentric party  in town Story by Kyle James Hovanec    Photos by Brent Sheffeld
62page