SO36


The SO36 club is a music club on Oranienstraße near Heinrichplatz in the area of Kreuzberg in Berlin, Germany.
It takes its name from the historic postcode of that area, SO36, in which the SO stands for Südost. The Kreuzberg district has historically been home to the Berlin punk rock movement, as well as other alternative subcultures in Germany.

History

SO36 was originally focused largely on punk music and in the 1970s was often frequented by musicians such as Iggy Pop and David Bowie. After problems Martin Kippenberger took over the management in 1979 and tried to create a crossover between punk, new wave and visual art. In those days the club rivaled New York's CBGB as one of the finest new-wave venues in the world. However unlike CBGB the venue still stands as of June 2020 and remains a fixture on the Berlin music scene championing new artists, while staying true to its punk past. In 2016, the club released SO36: 1978 bis heute, a retrospective illustrated book covering the 36-year history of the club, for €36.

Notable cultural connections

English rock band Killing Joke named a song $,O,36 on their eponymous first album, but it is unclear if the song was based on the postal code or the club. The Electric Ballroom held at the club is considered a legendary fixture of the Berlin techno gay scene. Gayhane founded 1997 by Turkish performer Fatma Souad is the nucleus of the Berlin Turkish gay and lesbian community. DJ Ipek, an internationally known DJ and performer at the club, is responsible for the Gayhane mixture of Arabic, Turkish and Indian music. German photographer Nicolaus Schmidt created both a documentary and fictitious portrait of the club, called an "amalgam of western and oriental culture".