PLAZDJ Headlines Monday Vinyl Session at Culture Cafe Bangkok
PLAZDJ headlined a strictly-vinyl Monday session at Culture Cafe Bangkok, spotlighting the city's underground minimal and techno vinyl selectors and reinforcing Bangkok's crate-driven club culture.

PLAZDJ closed out Culture Cafe Bangkok's Monday vinyl session on 12 January 2026, delivering a strictly-vinyl set that put local selectors and the city's underground minimal/techno sound in the spotlight. The session was billed as part of a regular Monday run that celebrates vinyl-only DJing, and the event listing noted drink deals and venue location details to make attendance easy for fans.
The headline set emphasized the tactile, listening-focused side of minimal and techno culture in Bangkok. PLAZDJ's approach - selecting from records rather than digital libraries - reinforced the crate-digging aesthetics that many in the scene prize: slow-building grooves, careful track selection, and attention to texture rather than spectacle. That format shaped the room into a focused listening environment, supporting a crowd that came to hear nuances in pressing editions and witness needle-to-vinyl transitions live.
Culture Cafe's Monday sessions have become a low-key hub for local selectors to test edits, swap records, and develop extended minimal mixes. By staging a strictly-vinyl night headlined by a recognized local selector, the venue provided a platform for DJs to prioritize sequence and groove over high-energy peak-time programming. For artists, that environment encourages risk-taking with obscure pressings and long-form mixes; for listeners, it delivers an alternative to bar-centric dance nights where sound and nuance can be secondary.
Practical details on the event page included the date - listed as 12 January 2026 (and shown as 13 January 2026 in some timezone displays) - plus venue information and drink promotions aimed at keeping the session accessible. Those details matter for anyone tracking Bangkok's underground calendar: modest cover and beverage offers help keep vinyl nights sustainable by drawing regular crowds without pricing out crate-diggers and students.
The immediate impact is local and cumulative. Nights like this help maintain the secondhand market for 12-inch records, create opportunities for emerging selectors to sharpen their craft, and remind local audiences that minimal and techno thrive outside of festival lineups and big-box clubs. They also feed a feedback loop: DJs who test edits in intimate settings often refine sets that later move to larger venues.
Expect Culture Cafe to continue using Monday nights as a testing ground for vinyl-first programming. If you follow Bangkok's minimal and techno scene, mark the Monday vinyl slot as a reliable space to hear new cuts, swap records, and support the selectors keeping the city's underground sound rolling.
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