Interview: Dog Eat Dog (Manchester)
(Originally published on teshno in January 2014).
Dog Eat Dog is a new night coming to Manchester, spearheaded by residents Ciaran Hansen, Toby Nicholas and Jordan Plange (alias Jeremy Toast). In preparation for the party’s first instalment, to be hosted at Kraak Gallery this coming Friday 31st January, Dylan Thompson caught up with the lads to check if they’ve got the right pedigree…
Eh up fellas. Could each of you tell us a little bit about yourself and your background? Any nights you've been involved with before?
Ciaran: I’m Ciaran and Dog Eat Dog is the first night that I've been involved in running, although I've been resident at a few others. Currently resident at Butter Side Up in Leeds (where I went to uni) and I’ve had residencies at a few short-lived nights in Newcastle - notably Vision, where guests included Jeremy Underground Paris and Margaret Dygas. Also had a night in Leeds called Krucht a few years ago, where we had Substance and Vainqueur play - in addition to Murmur, Forward Strategy Group and Pendle Coven, amongst others.
Toby: Ook - I'm originally from down south, near Cambridge, I run Six Axle with a couple of mates and have done a little bit here and there for a few nights up north in the past few years. Nothing proper in Manchester though - have been waiting to find an appropriate venue and meet some likeminded lads to run it with. Everything's fallen nicely into place over the past six months, real excited!
Jordan: Hi Dylan. I'm Ponte' born, Ponte' bred (‘ard as fuck and good in bed). I've spent the past 3 years in Manchester studying, which is where I first got involved with doing parties. In second year I teamed up with a lad I'd met and we started a night called Archive. At first the music policy leaned more towards bass music than it did house (as I was more into that sort of stuff back then) but for the last party we had DJ Sotofett smash it out for 6 hours, which was absolutely class.
Ciaran: I played the last party you dick.
Jordan: Oh yeah... that last party was a bit of shambles, wasn't going to mention that. Ciaran was alright though! Saved the day in fact - brought his mixer, needles, and a turntable - what a rate lad.
Toby: All I remember from that do was getting kicked out for spewing down the stairs.
How did you three amigos come to know each other then?
Toby: Err... roughly through going out in Leeds I'd say, for me at least.
Ciaran: Well, I remember meeting Jeremy/Jordan/P-Man after a night out in Leeds - we were both crashing at a mutual mate’s house and ended up coming in at the same time before heading to a house party together. The first time I met Toby was at Soup Kitchen in Manchester, but it was pretty brief…
Toby: Was it?
Ciaran: I think so. I’m sure you introduced yourself to me, because I knew your brother Josh. This was years ago mind.
Jordan: Haha yeah I remember that now! I knew that it had something to with the Louche parties in Leeds, but yeah fully remember that now. Toby - I think I met you at some house party in Manchester, we must have been talking for a few hours before I clocked that you were Josh's brother…
Ciaran: I think Louche probably has brought us together in a way… through the degrees of separation.
Toby: Yeah definitely!
We all love Louche. What were your motivations for starting something of your own then?
Toby: Well, the main one for me was going out in Manchester for the past four years to a lot of nights - some good, but the vast majority pretty flawed, whether in terms of DJs, sound system or crowd - and just wanting to have a crack at it myself.
Jordan: Personally, after running a night for two years, I'm was at a point where I knew exactly what I wanted out of a party - a small venue, intimate crowd and a banging soundsystem. I'd nearly achieved that with Archive, but the lad I was running with had different music tastes to myself. Both Ciaran and Toby's music tastes are very much inline with my own, as is their ethos - plus they're both bob on DJs, which together sets us in good stead for the months ahead!
Ciaran: I’ve wanted to start a night of my own for a long time, but have been waiting to be in the right time and place to do it. I want to bring a different sound than I’ve been hearing in the city.
And what is this sound you want to bring?
Jordan: Straight up bangers.
Ciaran: The sound that I’m on about is hard to pin down really. It can be heard in the sets of hardworking DJs that live to do it. It’s the passion or something… it’s hard to describe it without sounding like a cheesy bastard.
Toby: How can you define the good end of house and techno without sounding wanky? The “deeper side” of it?
Ciaran: Yeah... the cheesiest of the non-cheesy.
Jordan: 'Proper house'.
Ciaran: Just proper dance music.
Toby: Passion's key, definitely - dance music for people that properly love dance music.
Ciaran: Bangers are sound too, like.
I think your use of the term "dance music" seems quite appropriate here, from what I know about you guys and the stuff you play. Tunes that don't get caught up in noodling or experimentation or being too "deep" or whatever - cool, interesting music that still makes you move. Why have it at Kraak Gallery?
Jordan: Kraak Gallery is one of the very few venues in Manchester that are small, dark, and permit the loading of additional sound (something we all feel is the absolute key to a good party). I used to do parties at Q Cavern, a little Jamaican joint also in the heart of Picadilly, and it was class - it ticked all the same boxes. Problem is, it's run by a clueless knobhead.
Toby: Because it's the best small venue going in the city centre that'll let us put our own system in. For all its disused warehouses and trendy little bars, Manchester's strangely lacking in nice little spaces like Kraak.
Ciaran: Yeah, I’m relatively new to Manchester and have only been to Kraak once, it's a quality little space though - ideal for the atmosphere we are trying to create.
Could each of you pick one record you'll definitely be playing on Friday night? And why you'll be playing it?
Toby: I will most definitely be playing this, because like most of Tito's stuff from the late ‘90s it’s an absolute JAM.
Jordan: When I first heard this, all I could think was “This is soooo Dog Eat Dog”. So I bought it especially.
Toby: Stinks of Dog Eat Dog that, P-Man!
Ciaran: I just found a cool record I bought a few months ago that hasn't had as much love as it deserves. Will probably play a couple of tracks from it - sorry, it’s not on YouTube.
Jordan: That’s what we like about Ciaran, he's so underground half his tunes never make it to YouTube…
What does the future hold for Dog Eat Dog? Any cool bookings in the pipeline?
Ciaran: Well we’ve got some tosser on next month, like..
Jordan: Then we’ve got Andrew James Gustav in March, excited for that one. And then Ciaran’s having a little birthday bash in April, playing all night.
Ciaran: Yeah, really excited to hear Andrew play. His mixes are excellent and was lucky enough to hear him play all night in London last year, basically he's totally mint.
Toby: We’ve got a few slightly bigger things planned for after that, but you’ll have to wait and see.
And finally, if Dog Eat Dog could speak, what would it say?
Toby: “I’ll eat your dog”.
Jordan: “You’re a tosser”.
Ciaran: “Woof!”
Thanks lads.











