Half of Brighton seems to descend on the Big Chill each summer and now the festival is repaying the compliment.
What began as a mellow Sunday afternoon session in Islington back in 1994 is now a staple of the festival season, offering great music, a refined atmosphere and sanitary conditions which don't belong in the Middle Ages.
The Sunday Sunday events are a showcase for artists on the newly-revived Big Chill label.
Eva Abraham is "a woman who shatters the image of the female singer-songwriter" and was previously signed to the painfully fashionable City Rockers imprint.
Abraham's songs about love, hate and our unerring ability to screw up our own lives have won many admirers during tours with John Martyn, Dexy's and David Gray.
Her debut album Shadow Grazing will finally be released at the end of the month.
Downtempo master Bruce Bickerton's Alucidnation solo project veers from Badly Drawn Boy-esque folk to more abstract compositions, while AGK will deliver chilled electro covers of Duran Duran's Planet Earth and Nick Drake's Black-Eyed Dog.
DJs for the night are Leggo Beast, formerly one half of soundtrack funk specialists the Bullitnuts, and situationist-inspired Afrobeat duo Yam Yam.
Slots on the tour have been reserved for local acts, with Brighton's acoustic guitar duo Passion Dance opening proceedings.
Open from 6pm, admission £7.50/£5.50. Call 01273 647100.
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