If you like this event, you'll love our print magazine BOTHER. It's the antidote to the algorithm, a real heavyweight slab of stories, ideas and photography from the analogue world. Each copy also includes a £20 gift voucher for HebTroCo.
I Don't Even Like Jazz / Event TicketSunday 14 September 2025 / 5pm - 10:30pm
The evening do for our analogue listening event. Featuring Philip Arneill from the Tokyo Jazz Joints project, Neil Innes from ATA Records, and the Club 15 custom built analogue sound system. More about each of these down the page.
In stock
Your email order confirmation is your ticket. Show a copy of it at the door (phone or print-out).
Event Details
Where? Coin, Albert Street, Hebden Bridge
Doors open 5pm. Bar and music all through the evening.
5 – 6.30pm Food available (Usual menu + Japanese themed specials). Bar all night
7pm – 8pm Neil Innes from ATA Records presenting a reel to reel listening experience.
8.30pm – 10.30pm / Philip Arneill from the Tokyo Jazz Joints project presenting his long-running audiovisual project documenting Japanese jazz kissa culture.
Limited to 40 tickets – Coin will do their best to keep you sitting together with your pals but there will be table sharing to allow us all to fit and share the evening.
Philip Arneill from the Tokyo Jazz Joints project. He will be presenting Kiku where he plays records and tells us about the Japanese jazz kissa culture which he has been photographing for over 10 years.
Neil Innes from ATA Records will lead a reel to reel listening session introducing us to the work of his full analogue recording studio and record label.
Club 15 are bringing two custom built analogue sound systems where every component has been sweated over and made to perform at its best. Edward is a high grade audio nerd who delivers music that will stop you in your tracks.
I Don’t Even Like Jazz?
We’re calling this happening I Don’t Even Like Jazz because that’s what we’ve heard so often. People come for the physical analogue media, human contact, history, introduction to cultures, food and drinks tasting, you know the score… and they stay for the music. Often they leave with their minds opened and have an appreciation for jazz or at least a style of jazz that suits them.
Jazz has historically been a counter cultural force, its thread passing through the civil rights movement to the DIY music production aesthetic of today. There is a dynamic in jazz that has not died and we’re going to celebrate it.
It’s a day of events
Find out about the free happenings during the day at Coin and Saltas sandwich shop here.
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