gabber is dutch for mate. it is techno turned to 11. Ultra-fast, ultra dark, ultra-aggressive.
Here is the flyer for the party. I have friends from DC in town and they wanted to see drumcorps, which is a one man PA (public appearance which is when an electronic artist performs live rather than DJs music) involving aggressive drums and guitar and keyboard, having an almost industrial edge.
http://www.myspace.com/barcoreI was up for it because it sounded interesting and I've never been to a pure hardcore party and we decided that if it sucked, we could walk a few blocks to La Poisson Rouge and catch Glitch Mob and DJ Rheka.
We show up to the party which was held in an infoshop/artspace (aka commie hang out), and the first artist up is Akon, which was basically really fast techno made up a kick drum going damn fast with an occasional hit or sample to break up the monotony. Essentially it was built for speed and aggression.
They have a VJ who was doing image manipulation showing things like experimental short films interspersed with cgi psychedelia and occasional violent imagery. Which was frankly a bit expected. Hardcore, Gabber and Darkcore/Terrorcore focus on violent aggressive behavior and the music, cultural art and the video selections reflect that, but going into it informed is not really the same as experiencing it first hand.
There was another artist who did darkcore with strong overtones of violence against women while the VJ used clips of women being tortured and clips from horror films divorced from any context. As a fan of horror films and books, I felt that there was a great disservice done to those films because it divorced them from all context and placed them into an attempt to give a sick thrill when coupled with the sexual and violent samples in the music itself. It was disturbing to say the least, which while i can intellectually comprehend that, it was still quite different to experience in the dark under constant sonic assault.
One thing which really grabbed me by surprise was the amount of women there and people of color. Gabber has picked up racist overtones in its culture (much like the National Front coopted Oi) and my impression was that it was a pretty exclusive culture (due to the imagery alone).
My friend was in the bathroom when a fight broke out that included someone getting a bottle to the face and losing at least a tooth (he said he saw bits of tooth and blood on the floor afterward).
Then we went to LPR and it was Douchey McDoucherton and all his friends there while Brooklyn residents performed parodies of DJ sets.
Glitch Mob was pretty cool though.
http://www.xlr8r.com/listen/13750/mp3/Podcast_Mix_2007_10_04.mp3