
The signal went live inside the institution, and the energy was completely unmatched. On Saturday, May 16th, Deja Vu FM and the Back2Back: Up Ya Archives x Rendezvous Projects takeover completely transformed the new V&A East site, drawing a massive crowd of 8,441 people who queued down the block to feel the authentic vibe of East London underground history.
Deja Vu FM didn’t just participate—we anchored the entire day. We brought a complete, heavy-duty installation of original, authentic studio equipment right into the building, recreating the exact aesthetic and physical footprint of a legendary pirate radio station. Alongside the rig, our iconic Brain Records / OctaMED hardware masterclasses stole the show.
The boss himself,(DJ Dlux), was front and centre throughout the day. Not only did he stabilise the technical infrastructure for the entire event, but he also stepped up as a special guest speaker on the panels. Dlux shared the stage with fellow foundation pioneer and Brain Records founder Bizzy B to map out the roots of the music, before jumping on the DIY Culture panel to drop heavy science on how our scene built its own independent industries from scratch, with Deja legend Sting who is also founder of Jungle Promotion Telepathy, Life & Utopia as well as owner of Tina’s Marshgate Lane, Club EQ & Stratford Rex and also Chris “Black Slate” Hanson from Music House.
The main museum galleries might have the static displays, but the Storehouse takeover had the literal soul of the culture. Everyone from original 90s jungle steering-committee veterans to young ravers and three-year-old kids came through to cut pirate radio cassettes and see the hardware. As Nia Archives topped off an incredible day, she stated: “The installations like Deja Vu FM and the iconic Felt Soundsystem really brought the space to life and I don’t think anything like this had been done in a museum before it felt very original…”.
We came with our A-game, proved our cultural sovereignty, and showed the curators exactly how a real community block party is run. Big up to Bizzy B, Rubén, Josephine, Katherine Green, Nia Archives, and every single pioneer and raver who stepped through to make history with us.
What’s Next? The broadcast doesn’t stop here. If you thought the V&A takeover was loud, wait until you see where the permanent transmission is coming from. This June, the blueprint tightens as we launch our physical archive and studio headquarters: Arch 421 (The Unmuted Archives) in Mile End, E3, The roots are deep, the culture is protected, and the signal is officially reclaimed.
Stay tuned.

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