Eastenderz at Drumsheds: Sound. Crowd. Identity.
- 52 minutes ago
- 2 min read
When Eastenderz takes over a space like Drumsheds, the result isn’t just an event. It’s a cultural checkpoint.
In this blog, we break down three defining elements of the night: the sound, the crowd, and the Eastenderz identity.
East End Dubs b2b Sosa
The headline back-to-back was pure groove warfare. East End Dubs laid down hypnotic, rolling foundations while Sosa injected sharper, punch-driven selections. The interplay felt natural — long blends, patient builds, basslines stretching across the warehouse before snapping tight into controlled drops. It was minimal with muscle, keeping the dancefloor locked without ever tipping into excess.
For the closing stretch, they shifted into something timeless. When Music Is The Answer rolled through the system, it didn’t feel like a track — it felt like a statement. A full-circle moment.
And as The Weekend blended seamlessly into the mix, the warehouse energy softened into unity. Hands up. Voices rising. Strangers singing together.
Hot Since 82
Hot Since 82 brought authority to the room. His set carried a slightly deeper, more emotive edge — rich low-end pressure paired with subtle melodic textures that cut through the industrial space of Drumsheds. There was maturity in the pacing: no rush, no gimmicks, just confidence in groove progression. When he lifted the energy, it felt earned — waves of tension rolling through the crowd before releasing into powerful, immersive moments.
Huge congratulations on selling your party out in style. That is on hell of a space to fill. Congrats and thank you. - HotSince82
Kolter
Kolter delivered precision. Clean percussion, tight drum programming, and that unmistakable European minimal sharpness. His transitions were fluid, keeping the energy consistent while adding refined layers that rewarded attentive dancers. Understated but impactful.
Jamback b2b Laidlaw
This back-to-back leaned raw and warehouse-ready. Darker tones, gritty basslines, and a slightly more underground flavour pushed the night into deeper territory. Their chemistry felt spontaneous, playful at times, but always groove-focused — the kind of set that keeps heads down and feet moving.

My face says it all...Unbelievable night in the capital (London). One of my favourite B2B to date with the man (Ladlaw)
Cristina Lazic
Cristina Lazic balanced elegance with drive. Her selection blended rolling minimal with subtle melodic accents, creating tension through detail rather than drama. She controlled the atmosphere with finesse, proving that intensity doesn’t need volume — just precision.
And in that final moment, as the last chords echoed through Drumsheds, it was clear this wasn’t just a closing set — it was a reminder. A reminder that beyond lineups, lighting, and scale, what truly moves a room is connection. Groove built the foundation, but unity carried it home. For a few hours in that warehouse, nothing else mattered. The music spoke, London answered — and the dancefloor became one.





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