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The Great Varsity Band Hunt

as I could stand up" , and joined the Jesus College Choir at the age of eight, rising to become head boy. He first showed signs of switching to the dark side at thirteen, when he began to produce music using an Atari 520st; a set of decks followed three years later. Today, he produces under the name Le Jockey, making precise, melodic music that occupies "a middle ground between electro and minimal" . He hasn't abandoned his past, though – he describes Stravinsky's The Rite of Spring as "possibly my favourite piece of music" . He has DJed at many a Cambridge night and party, and as far away as Budapest and Madrid.

A resident, Johnny can boast of a greater contribution to dance music in Cambridge than nearly anyone. He helps out with college ents, providing the PA and sound expertise for Emmanuel; he puts on a monthly techno and electro night at De Luca; and, with Ben Vincett and Justin Argent, he founded Cambridge label Horseplay Records in 2006 as an outlet for electronic music with an experimental edge. Johnny has an EP coming out on vinyl in May, and a

number of remix projects are due throughout the year. He gives us all reason to be cheerful: unlike many of our interviewees, he is positive about the Cambridge music scene. "Scratch beneath the surface and you'll find a thriving night life." [DC]

www.myspace.com/lejockey

www.horseplayrecords.co.uk

Jack Bayley

If you've felt Cambridge dancefloors wobble over the past year, there's a good chance that Jack Bayley's been behind the decks. A third year theologian, he used to call himself Jam Baby, but recently took on the " sort of reggae-y " name of I-Jambi. Although he thinks that people give the Cambridge music scene " too much stick " , he felt that there was a lack of nights putting on the sort of music that he wanted to hear. With some friends, he started putting on nights at Kambar at the start of the year: Voodoo Rave is geared around electronic music like

dubstep, drum ‘n' bass, and techno, while Sounds of Royalness gives priority to two of Jack's great loves, reggae and dancehall; both have helped him give breaks to student DJs. His own sets are characterized by a " big and bashy, ruff and tuff " sound, and are crowd-pleasing in the right way – by playing dubstep next to its ancestor, reggae, he creates constant good vibes, and he veers towards the genre's more danceable moments. It doesn't stop in CB2, as Jack has plans to put on nights in London in the future. [DC]

Plaster of Paris

Plaster of Paris met at Camberwell College of Arts, where they both did Art Foundation. One day, they thought they'd try covering a song together for an open mic night at what Lewis describes as a "godawful local hippy place." It ended up going really well and in between hearing songs about the joys of friendship, performed by dreadlocked fifty-year-olds, they decided to carry on and started calling themselves a band. Lewis subsequently moved on to King's, whereas