Upcoming events

15 years of Pure Electro - birthday party
Friday 27.12.2024. / 22.00.
U petak, 27. 12., uz uobičajeno pozitivno blagdansko raspoloženje, dodatno će nas uveseliti proslava 15. rođendana Pure Electro partyja u DVA OSAM! Pure Electro je dobro poznati brand na alternativnoj sceni, koji je započeo 2009. godine, te ove godine slavi 15. rođendan. Činjenica da party traje već 15 godina dovoljan je dokaz kvalitete partyja, te da je Hrvatskoj trebao jedan takav dark electro/industrial/EBM/synthpop party. Tijekom godina party je stekao vjernu bazu fanova, koji ne samo da dolaze na party nego i reklamiraju ovaj brand noseći Pure Electro majice i ostali merchandise. DJ residents: DJane REDLILLY (dark electro, ebm, synthpop) DJ END (dark electro, harsh electro) B-day special surprise & free glowsticks & stickers! Budite dio najvećeg EBM, dark electro, futurepop, industrial, dark wave, synthpop partya u gradu! Preporučeni dresscode: goth, cyber, black, leather, latex, rubber, dress to impress. • • • • • Cijena ulaznice: • 6,00 € u pretprodaji  • 8,00 € na ulazu u klub  • 5,00 € za studente, uz predočenje X-ice, na ulazu u klub Osim putem interneta, ulaznice se mogu kupiti u dućanu ploča PDV, na prvom katu Pločnika, u Međimurskoj ulici 21 u Zagrebu.
Roots In The Woods
Saturday 28.12.2024. / 22.00.
Kako završiti tekuću godinu nego odličnim sound system partyjem; u subotu, 28. 12., u DVA OSAM korijenje na brdu puštaju Roots In The Woods, u sastavuRoots In The Woods sound system feat. LEU & Crucial P Tosvami Sound Peace messenjah sound system S najboljim željama i tulumima vidimo se u 2025. godini!• • • • • Cijena ulaznice: • 6,00 € u pretprodaji  • 8,00 € na ulazu u klub  • 5,00 € za studente, uz predočenje X-ice, na ulazu u klub Osim putem interneta, ulaznice se mogu kupiti u dućanu ploča PDV, na prvom katu Pločnika, u Međimurskoj ulici 21 u Zagrebu.
NEW YEAR'S PARTY 2025 by DJ Tomi Phantasma
Tuesday 31.12.2024. / 21.00.
NEW YEAR'S PARTY BY DJ TOMI PHANTASMA - DOČEK NOVE 2025. GODINE U ZAGREBAČKOM KLUBU DVA OSAM! Nakon nedavno proslavljene četrdesete obljetnice DJ-iranja Tomija Phantasme, koja se održala u klubu DVA OSAM, na istom mjestu ćemo dočekati i nadolazeću 2025. godinu; uz DJ-a Tomija Phatasmu! Tako ćemo se u tom najdugovječnijem zagrebačkom alternativnom klubu, nekad poznatom pod imenom Jabuka, a sada DVA OSAM, na dočeku Nove 2025. moći vratiti glazbenim vremeplovom u zlatno doba kluba Jabuke, osamdesetih i devedesetih, gdje će DJ Tomi Phantasma puštati spoj svojih programa Dark Side i 80’s Party koje uspješno vodi već više od dva desetljeća. Naravno, uz ostalu glazbu koja se puštala u Jabuci zadnjih 40 godina, tj. objedinjenih starih jabučarskih programa, kojih je dio bio i sam Tomi. Zadnjeg dana ove godine, u utorak 31. 12. 2024. vrata kluba DVA OSAM će se otvoriti u 21:00, a nakon što se zagrijete besplatnim pićem dobrodošlice slijedi pozdravljanje poznate ekipe koju niste vidjeli "sto godina“! Nakon toga ćete, plešući uz stare "jabučarske" hitove, dočekati Novu godinu! Na repertoaru će biti tipične jabučarske eighties stvari poput Depeche Mode, Simple Minds, Ultarvox!, Human League, OMD, Bronski Beat, Soft Cell, Visage, The Stranglers, Gang Of Four, New Order, David Bowie, Blondie, Billy Idol, preko Dark Sidea tj. Bauhaus, Joy Division, The Sisters Of Mercy, Siouxsie, The Cure, Virgin Prunes, March Violets, She Past Away, She Wants Revenge, Pixies, Nick Cave, Violent Femmes, EKV, The Smiths, The Cult, Front 242, Nitzer Ebb, Laibach, Mizar, Placebo, Editors, She Past Away, Marilyn Mansona, Rammstein, Mortiis, Moby, Rob Zombie, Prodigy do rokenrola koji se vrtio u Jabuci tj. The Cult, Iggy Pop & The Stooges, Ramones, Sex Pistols, The Clash, The Cramps, The Godfathers, Jane's Addiction, Red Hot Chilly Peppers, Rage Against The Machine, White Stripes, Franz Ferdinand, Black Keys; za svakoga ponešto. Klub će pripremiti grickalice za cijelu noć, a čeka vas i pjenušac u ponoć kako biste mogli nazdraviti s ekipom! • • • • Cijena ulaznice: • 17,00 € u pretprodaji  • 20,00 € na ulazu u klub  Osim putem interneta, ulaznice se mogu kupiti u dućanu ploča PDV, na prvom katu Pločnika, u Međimurskoj ulici 21 u Zagrebu. Sretna, uspješna i mirna svima 2025. godina!
Liquosphere: 10 godina
Saturday 4.1.2025. / 23.00.
Liquosphere: 10 godina, subota 4. 1. 2025. Liquosphere representing liquid / atmospheric drum & bass: 10 godina projekta w/ After Neven, Corea, InChoon, Sven Nalis • • • • • Novi datum Liquosphere partyja je subota, 4. 1. 2025. Sve ulaznice kupljene za prvi datum, vrijede i za novi. Ako nekome ne odgovara novi datum i želi povrat novca molimo da se javi na e-mail klub@dvaosam.com • • • • • Otprilike 10 godina nakon svog inicijalnog lansiranja na domaću klabing kartu, liquid / atmospheric drum & bass projekt Liquosphere uplovljava u klub DVA OSAM. S preko 40 evenata na horizontu iza sebe, ovime će obilježiti okruglu desetljetnu jubilarku i hrabro zakoračiti u novo desetljeće. Za tu prigodu zavrtit će se cjelonoćni session tekućih drum & bass ritmova i dubokih jungle atmosfera, a s tim će se zadatkom za gramofonima naći uvijek rado slušani selektori s domaće scene. Uz domaćine projekta, InChoona i After Nevena, za miks pultom nas očekuju i počasni Liquosphere rezidenti - nezaobilazni (ex)bassinvaders veteran Corea, te legenda i stari likvid fanatik s riječke dnb scene - Sven Nalis. Line-up: After Neven Corea InChoon Sven Nalis Projekt Liquosphere glazbeni je program orijeniran na liqud funk / atmospheric jungle podžanrove drum & bassa. Program je beta lansiran u Das Hausu 2014., službeno lansiran u AKC Attacku iste godine, a u proteklih 10 godina u sklopu programa organizirano je 40-ak glazbenih večeri u prostorima kao što su Pločnik, Sirup, Funk, Grey Room, Kocka, Podmornica, Katran, Surogat, Masters, Željezničar, te na otvorenome. U organizacijskom opusu programa je i realizacija međunarodnih DJ bukinga, svirki live band elektronike te open-air događanja na egzotičnim lokacijama. Nositelji projekta zabilježili su DJ nastupe na brojnim domaćim (Skrivena uvala, Foresterra, Regeneration, Dub Colony itd.) i stranim (Hospitality on the Beach) festivalima, a nedavno je održan i prvi event izvan granica RH u suorganizaciji projekta - Tribute to Amen u Dublinu.• • • • • Cijena ulaznice: • 5,00 € u pretprodaji  • 8,00 € na ulazu u klub  • 5,00 € za studente, uz predočenje X-ice, na ulazu u klub Osim putem interneta, ulaznice se mogu kupiti u dućanu ploča PDV, na prvom katu Pločnika, u Međimurskoj ulici 21 u Zagrebu.
Tramhaus
Friday 14.2.2025. / 20.00.
Tramhaus je postpunk senzacija iz nemirnog i uvijek inovativnog Rotterdama. U relativno kratkom vremenu kako postoji, Tramhaus je uspio steći prepoznatljivost daleko izvan granica svog rodnog grada. Njihove svirke obilježene su energičnim i veselim nastupima, a bend dokazano može prenijeti tu energiju i na pozornici i na snimljenim materijalima. Glazba Tramhausa zvuči kao soundtrack za živopisnu, misterioznu i opasnu priču. S njima nema vremena za opuštanje jer bend slušatelje vodi kroz utrku punu emocija i euforije, potpomognutu pjesmama koje su istovremeno energične i snažne, ali i krhke i apstraktne. Nakon svog prvog singla na 7-inčnom vinilu iz 2022., Tramhaus je izdao još tri singla i jedan EP, a u biografiju su upisali i intenzivno nastupanje diljem Europe, Japana i SAD-a. Njihova ranija izdanja zaradila su pohvale i u međunarodnim medijima, a slušali su se i na vodećim radijskim postajama, uključujući KEXP Seattle, BBC6music i WDR. Objavljivanje njihovog debitantskog albuma, za nizozemsku nezavisnu izdavačku kuću Subroutine Records, prati i opsežna europska turneja koja uključuje osamnaest zemalja, a u sklopu koje u veljači 2025. premijerno nastupaju i u Hrvatskoj. • • • • • Cijena ulaznice: • 6,00 € u pretprodaji - do 31.12.2024. • 8,00 € u pretprodaji - od 1.1.2025. • 10,00 € na ulazu u klub • 8,00 € za učenike i studente, na ulazu u klub Osim putem interneta, ulaznice se mogu kupiti u dućanu ploča PDV, na prvom katu kluba Pločnik, u Međimurskoj ulici 21 u Zagrebu. • • • • • Tramhaus is the daring postpunk sensation from the restless and ever-innovative city of Rotterdam. In the span of its relatively short existence, Tramhaus has managed to make a name far beyond the borders of their hometown. Marked by their joyous and energetic experience, the band has proven to be able to convey this message both in live and recorded settings. The music of Tramhaus feels like a soundtrack to a vivacious, mysterious, and dangerous story. There is no room to lean back as the band takes you with them in a drag race full of emotions and euphoria driven by streamlined, fiery songs mixed with fragile and abstract tones. This whole spectacle is fueled by the near-symbiotic relationship between the five band members. After their first 7" single in 2022, the band released three more singles and an EP, and heavily toured across Europe, Japan and the USA. Previous releases were hailed by international media, and played by leading radio including KEXP Seattle, BBC6music and WDR. The release of their debut album, through Dutch independent Subroutine Records, is followed by an extensive European release tour, across eighteen countries. • • • • • Tramhaus ‘The First Exit’ album biography by Richard James Foster Popular music “makes” emotion. You can argue it is an instrument of enlightenment as well as entertainment. The artform has certainly driven some mad over time, like Horkheimer and Adorno, who used the metaphor of the ultimate boho trickster, Odysseus, lashed to the mast of his own ship, to inch their way towards an understanding of mass (musical) culture. Despite their best efforts - and to misquote David Byrne - they’d only gotten half way there. Pop music gave a sigh and replied, quoting Arthur Seaton. “Whatever people say I am, that's what I'm not.” Great pop music also often sounds like lots of other pop music, and just itself: all at once. This is certainly true of The First Exit, the debut album from young Rotterdam rock band Tramhaus. The album can remind one at times of other wonderful instances of manufactured noise, from the likes of Pixies, Joy Division, Fat White Family and Nirvana. Not that Tramhaus are like any of these acts. The Rotterdammers have forged their own collective creative identity, born of long hours on tour and in the studio, and working and being together, as a tight-knit set of friends. The First Exit is certainly a reflection of the band’s collective attitude and attendant work ethic that has seen the release of six singles in eighteen months. But it is also a break with the past through a form of fusion with the present: the mission to capture their titanic live sound in a studio setting. The place chosen for this instance of manufactured shamanism was Katzwijm Studios in Voorhout, an old converted bulbshed in the Bollenstreek, the flower growing region of the southern Netherlands. Katzwijm has shaped the sound of many alternative Dutch acts over the last decade, and its intimate spaces and no-nonsense, collaborative reputation suited the band perfectly. Studio engineer Floyd Atema found himself behind the controls. Guitarist Micha Zaat: “Floyd’s guidance gave wings to this album. His talent for gently yet firmly insisting on trying one more take is what you need when you're an artist locked up in a former bulbshed!” Songs were endlessly tweaked before recording, in order to keep focus and capture the kind of one-take spontaneity the band have built their reputation on. According to Zaat, any “irrelevant distractions from the real deal” were kept at arm’s length. The First Exit starts at a tremendous lick. Opener ‘The Cause’ kicks off with a muffled drum fill that reminds one of ‘Disorder’ by Joy Division, and there all similarities end. “Seems like everyone is blind!” screams Lukas Jansen over the top of some jet-propelled guitar work. “Do you really wanna go where the others all go?” replies lead guitarist Nadya van Osnabrugge to Jansen, and, by implication, us too. ‘What are they on about?’ we ask ourselves. Whatever it is, it's important. And there it is, Tramhaus’s key card, slapped down right at the beginning: their happy knack of creating a sense of mystery and burning emergency. This simple, tough, track also knows when to hold back, to regroup for a final assault; the great drop off in pressure thanks to the workings of a canny rhythm section. From then on the steady clang of the guitars invoke a machine press, the scraping “tick-tick” of the strings counting Jansen in, so he can charge forth again. The second track, ‘Once Again’, gives us the flip side of the band’s psyche - a Hamlet-like sardonic melancholy. The indolent vocal line is set over a sparsely furnished, though well constructed song that is happy to pootle along until van Nadya Osnabrugge’s guitar calls the other instruments to order with a ringing tone. Suddenly, with Nadya adding a backing vocal, Jansen screams out his message at his most feral. And then it’s over; the bass brings matters back down and it feels as if the track has magicked itself out of existence, like a teenager escaping a family gathering. This sonic escape act is something we hear elsewhere on the record. Lead single ‘Beech’ is initially built around a simple repeated riff that supports a set of deadpan, somewhat gnomic lyrics. These can’t fail to get under your skin. “A prisoner, a clown / And a bar in town with a name referring to a tree.” What? Well, that’s part of the deal with Tramhaus, something’s up, in a specific place and time, but we don’t know yet, so we have to stick with the song to find out. (Oh, yeah… the way Jansen sets out matters could have older humans remembering Pixies in their prime, too.) We don't get to listen to Jansen’s tale for too long though. Tension is invoked by the almost savage contrast between loud and quiet, courtesy of a huge chorus, aided by a mix of coruscating lead guitar lines that feel hot to the touch, and balanced by clever interjections from the second guitar. It’s the sort of chilling accord that great twin guitar attacks should possess. This mid-tone snarl up is supported by a fabulous ticking rhythm and rumbling bass line that always feels interested in what’s going on. Not wanting to be left out, Jansen’s screaming vocals literally slide down towards us like a kid tumbling down a water chute in an amusement park. It’s a fabulous single of the old school. The grooviness of ‘Beech’ allows ‘A Necessity’ to come swaggering towards us like it’s trying to sell us a timeshare, or bitcoin. Again, the lyrics have you hooked. “Thanks for putting in all the work,” or, “Redefining gravity / I've been living like someone else, yeah.” Talk about message oblique speech. These lines are propped up by a bubbling rhythm section that lays down an itchy take on funk. Soon, a killer guitar riff that sounds like a bugle call for reveille turns up and Jansen carries on his an angry treatise. “At least we are walking with pride / if you want to know why.” There’s a lot to unpack, but nothing is overdone, and, naturally, everything is amped to the max. Again, it’s a track that - in that pesky modern, arm's length manner - decides to quickly scarper before it has to explain itself. With ‘Semiotics’ Jansen croaks out his lines in his best bedroom manner: we could think it’s some bordello spat unfolding, the sort of thing Fat White Family and Gallon Drunk would invoke. The guitar lines suddenly switch from cruising to crushing mode; and again lead us through the lurid noire of the song, like Ariadne’s thread. Yet another instance of the “Tramhaus challenge”: where and when, in this shadowplay, do we strap ourselves in? At once very clear in emotion, sometimes opaque in meaning, the scenarios the band invoke are akin to murals; ones smeared on the wall in thick impasto. And guess what, ‘Semiotics’ grabs its coat and does one, before you’ve decoded it. As mentioned at the beginning, Tramhaus’s music can remind you of lots of things that only confirm the fact they sound like no one but themselves. ‘Worthwhile’ is akin to Prometheus nicking Zeus’s lighter. ‘Day of The Lords’? ‘Teen Spirit’? Why not all at once, which is what we get. The dryness of the track, its unashamedness in plucking the riffs back from the aforementioned titans - like someone rifling through your coat pockets in the club cloakroom - and the fact it won’t get out of your face (despite travelling at a steady 1 km/ph, just like Roky Erikson did) all serve to endear. That it’s by far the longest track on the record is another cause to rejoice. Two great pop tracks follow to reset the controls. Firstly, ‘The Big Blowout’ is a hot and restless travelogue driven by a bouncing beat and intermittent jets of white noise from the twin guitar attack. Again there is a sense of unquiet conjured up by the marriage of red hot guitars and Jansen’s total commitment. A great quick ending, too. Tramhaus are truly masters of escape. The stomping ‘Ffleur Hari’ boasts one of the band’s trademark one liners that demands you know more: “He always has been a dreamer” sets up another emergency, this time a relentless stomp that creates the ground for a set of cavernous guitar lines that now and again echo Will Sergeant at his most ironclad. Simple, but very effective Stuff. It’s worth noting that the beat on The First Exit is very fluid and inventive throughout, essentially reactive with no real formulaic tempo or pattern. Jim Luiten’s stick work, and the complimenting bass lines from Julia Vroegh give the songs a real sense of urgency and interest. All good things come to an end: ‘Past Me’ boasts another incredibly catchy guitar riff, this time vocals are taken by Nadya van Osnabrugge, before Jansen comes in to initially duet and add a shouted warning that “it’s getting harder to stay sane”. Some lines are phrased as challenges to an imaginary opponent: “Confidence, ah, forget about it”. ‘Past Me’ is the nearest they come to writing a pop song. It’s the sort of music that draws a line in the sand that you, the listener, are desperate to jump over. Like a number of classic records, The First Exit clocks in at just over the half hour mark. But so what? This debut is a quest document, filled with stories that bewitch, unsettle, and excite. The listener will need a while to unpack such a rich and exciting record and bask in its fiery afterglow. Repeated listening is recommended. To totally misquote the Alexandrian poet, Cavafy, what a journey.