Not picking up
5G users, average download speed*
May-August 2020, Mbps
Source: Opensignal
*Including previous generations
when 5G not available
Britain
Germany
Hong Kong
Australia
Switzerland
Netherlands
Taiwan
South Korea
Saudi Arabia
120
100
80
60
40
20
0
I
t’s groundhog decade
in Banwen, a
small village in Wales. When the mak-
ers of the film “Pride” needed a location
for an embattled Welsh mining commu-
nity in the 1980s, they chose the tiny
village on the edge of the Brecon Bea-
cons. When 3,000 ravers arrived last
weekend, that dubious decade seemed to
be making a comeback.
Headlines about illegal raves recall
the “second summer of love” in 1988,
fuelled by the rise of dance music and
party drugs such as ecstasy. The closure
of clubs has revived that spirit this year,
despite coronavirus restrictions banning
gatherings of more than 30 people out-
doors. The Metropolitan Police has re-
corded more than 1,000 raves (which it
defines as unlicensed music events with
more than 20 people) in London since
the end of June. Between 2015 and 2018,
the most raves reported to the Met in a
single year was 133.
Even before the pandemic, raves were
making a comeback. A combination of
expensive rents in big cities and precari-
ous operating licences has changed
Britain’s nightlife. Big venues have
passed their costs on to clubbers—entry
to Printworks, a factory-turned-club in
south-east London, can cost £40 ($54)—
and drugs are less tolerated. In 2016
authorities revoked the licence of Fabric,
a famous club in London, after two drug-
related deaths. It reopened five months
later, but with stricter rules, including
id
-scanning and lifetime bans for any-
one caught asking for drugs.
Smaller venues have taken advantage
of big venues’ problems, and so have rave
organisers. “You’ve got block parties,
hippies in the woods, and London ones
with middle- class people, thrown in a
professional manner,” says James Morsh,
who runs PillReport, a group that en-
courages people to rave responsibly. In
May Mr Morsh organised the first social-
ly distanced legal rave, with permission
from Nottingham council. He had over
750 requests to attend, but could only
allow 40 people to take part. He admits
that it’s “not really what partying should
be like”, although the arrival of 12 police
officers gave the event an authentic feel.
Once the police were satisfied that the
revellers were not breaking any rules,
they let them carry on.
Tougher punishments were intro-
duced last month to deter people from
partying. Eight organisers of the rave in
Banwen were given fines of up to £10,000
each under the new regulations. But
stopping determined ravers is hard,
when locations are kept secret until the
last minute and details shared through
WhatsApp and Instagram. Mr Morsh
thinks that the new penalties will have
little effect: “The people throwing parties
are going to keep throwing parties.”
The consequences for Banwen were
not as grim as some feared. “When that
many people turn up it’s a bit like ‘Oh
shit, what have they come to do? Have
they come to ruin the village?’,” says
Alun, who lives nearby. But on checking
it out, he found a fairly civilised event.
Some attendees were even using hand
sanitiser.
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