Clubsweethearts 22 12 31 Olivia Trunk And Funky... Review
On the last night of the year, a retiring club DJ and a mysterious archivist named Olivia Trunk discover a forgotten 22-12-31 B-side that might either save or shatter the underground scene they love. The velvet rope was already down at ClubSweethearts. Not because the party was over, but because midnight on December 31st was the only time the place stopped pretending. Olivia Trunk slipped past the ghost of a line, her vintage leather carryall thumping against her hip. Inside, the air tasted like glitter, dry ice, and old secrets.
Funky picked up the tape. His thumb traced the date. 22 12 31. Twenty-second of December, ’31? No—22nd hour, 12th minute, 31st second. A timestamp. The exact moment Janus had supposedly walked out of the studio and never returned. ClubSweethearts 22 12 31 Olivia Trunk And Funky...
“You want me to drop a curse on the dance floor,” Funky said. But he was already cueing up track three. On the last night of the year, a
“Friends, lovers, strangers, and sweethearts,” she said. “In three minutes, Funky will play a song that hasn’t been heard in twenty-three years. It’s called ‘Funky 22 12 31.’ If you feel the floor tilt, don’t fight it. If you see a man in a silver jacket crying, give him space. That’s just Janus. He’s been looking for this beat for a long time.” Olivia Trunk slipped past the ghost of a
At midnight, the confetti cannons misfired and shot silver streamers into the ventilation system. No one cared. The countdown happened on the faces of the dancers, not on a screen. Funky looped the final sixteen seconds of the track into an infinite, breathless coda. The room became a single organism, swaying.
He smiled. It was the first time in twenty-three years.
“That’s the ghost set,” said Roman, the barback, not looking up from polishing a coupe glass. “No one’s played it since ‘99.”
