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Phone screens are “ruining the club experience”; could wearable tech save screen-plagued dancefloors?“Phones have been a blessing and a curse in my DJing life,” ponders Fat Tony when asked about smartphone use on the dancefloor. “Clubbing is all about energy and connection to the music, and while capturing that matters, the reality is that screens take us out of the moment.”

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Now, the iconic British selector thinks he’s found a remedy that will protect the very foundations of dance culture: wearable tech. “They give people freedom to experience the night while keeping the memories alive,” he says, having recently partnered with Ray-Ban to promote the Meta Gen 2 Glasses (as did popstar-rapper Doja Cat, who wore a pair in a backstage tour video posted to her Instagram).
“When I first tried them, I figured two things,” Fat Tony recalls of the smart glasses, which offer high-definition photo and video capture, AI-powered assistance, hands-free communication, and live translation. “Using them to capture a moment feels a lot more special,” he suggests, likening the experience to bringing out a digital or disposable camera… “And you no longer have to worry about everyone being on their phones in the club.”
Having banned phones at his gigs eight years ago, Fat Tony isn’t alone in feeling this way. A recent study showed more than half of clubbers believe that mobile screens are ruining the raving experience; the Keinemusik show that went viral for having such a dead crowd is disheartening proof — all phones, no dancing, it was bitingly satirised by Resident Advisor as ‘The Great Regression’.
Image: Press
Since then, the idea of switching off and dialling in has proved increasingly popular, with more and more venues and artists following in the footsteps of Fat Tony, London clubs Fabric and Fold, Pikes hotel in Ibiza, and, famously, Berghain in Berlin. Recent phone-ban converts include The Warehouse Project’s Concourse venue in Manchester, Lakota Moon Club in Bristol, Sankeys and Amber’s in Manchester. On the live circuit, Jack White, Bob Dylan and metal band Ghost have adopted no-phone policies for their tours. Last summer, pop superstar Sabrina Carpenter considered doing the same.
Back to the dancefloor, though, and Fat Tony makes it clear why he was among the first. “The dancefloor is about connecting people,” he states bluntly — “and what could be less connecting than everyone collectively having their phones out in a club?” While he likes that it’s easier than ever for people to capture a memory, he is unsure whether this is always a good thing. “I don’t mind someone taking a quick video here and there, but when you see clips of certain DJs, and there’s not a single person in the crowd that isn’t filming… it makes you wonder what the point of being there is if you’re not present.” He’s also not convinced that people even look through the majority of their pictures.
All this points to one simple question, then: why do we need cameras on dancefloors at all? “Some of my favourite memories were created on a dancefloor,” Fat Tony says bluntly, before pausing to respond: “Don’t you want to be able to relive yours?” It’s reasonable to think that most people would answer ‘yes’, but how can all this phone-based intrusion be removed?
Image: Press
Having put the Meta glasses to the test at a recent event, he’s confident that wearable tech is the answer. On 29 November last year, he DJ’d at Club 2.0, a one-night event at London venue FRAMELESS’ Blank Canvas gallery where attendees were asked to keep their phones hidden and on airplane mode. Those who still wanted to document the night were instead offered a pair of Ray-Ban Meta Gen 2 smart glasses. “It gave an insight into what a club would look like when guests move away from their cameras and stay present more,” he says. The collaboration included the creation of an Ibiza sunset visual room, which was inspired by Fat Tony’s history of DJing on the island. “That instantly drew me to the project,” he says of the vision behind the party at which attendees placed their devices in sealed pouches.
“Clubbing need not choose between memory and presence,” concluded Nisa Serin in a post-event feature for Luxuriate Life. “One could fully engage with the beat and energy, while still taking home something more enduring than a blurry phone video. They also wondered if Club 2.0 could be a “beacon for change” in nightlife and events… where “curated, immersive, tech-enabled experiences prioritise attendance over documentation, presence over posts…”
While this remains to be seen, London Evening Standard journalist Allegra Handelsma has also given a personal account of her time testing the “nightlife tool”. “To me, the glasses initially felt like another AI gimmick, an accessory just for tech bros,” she said in a feature focusing on her days wearing them at London club Lost, as well as Lorde’s 02 arena show in the capital. In the end, her experience was unquestionably positive: “They gave me the freedom to record my favourite songs without any pressure to constantly check my screen,” she wrote. “Instead, I could dance, sing and look straight at the artist. In other words, I was fully present.”
FRAMELESS Colour in Motion. Image: Press
There’s no denying, however, that this type of technology isn’t as ubiquitous, necessary or affordable as a smartphone (Ray-Ban’s Meta Gen 2 glasses cost between £370 and £450, depending on the make and model). Concerns have also been raised about the privacy of this technology; just this month, the Manchester Evening News reported that residents were left feeling ‘violated’ after being recorded by strangers wearing Meta glasses. Last October, Forbes published that two Harvard students went viral as they demonstrated how they used Meta’s Ray-Ban smart glasses to access the personal information of people on campus—including name, age, home address and phone number—raising significant security concerns about facial recognition and artificial intelligence technologies.
Nonetheless, Fat Tony is confident that the trend of wearing Meta glasses in clubs will soon catch on. “They’re way more accessible than you might think,” he suggests. “As with any new technology, developers will make them a crucial part of people’s lives soon enough.”
The key positive of these types of glasses, Fat Tony suggests, is that “they will allow us to all look up again. As a Londoner, especially, I love my city, and as so many of us are constantly on our phones, we take that for granted.” He suggests that AI glasses can fix this.
When asked to highlight any negatives, Fat Tony reaches a blank. “Their invention in itself is so revolutionary,” he says. “The more we invent tech that is more integrated with our lives, the less we’ll be on our phones — that will help bring back the human connection our dancefloors depend on so much.”
While Handelsma concluded in her London Evening Standard piece that she is “not convinced these glasses will redefine nightlife or fix our relationship with technology, Fat Tony is more optimistic. “I can easily see AI glasses shaping the way we communicate and capture memories in a positive way,” he offers. Whether or not wearable tech such as Ray-Ban’s smart glasses become the norm at clubs in the near-future remains to be seen, but if the price were to drop enough, it doesn’t seem unfeasible.
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DJ and author Fat Tony is adamant that smart glasses and other wearable tech can mitigate the overwhelming number of screens in clubs and venus.