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Longevity Rave brings Tina Technotic and Yukari to Hackney Bridge, London for a night of techno and connection

Led by Tina Technotic and Yukari, Longevity Rave explores how nightlife, connection, and collective joy can meet on the dancefloor

 

Longevity Rave arrives at Hackney Bridge in London on Saturday, March 21, bringing together Tina Technotic, Yukari, and a wider lineup for a night shaped by techno, joy, connection, and wellbeing. More than a club event, the concept explores how music, movement, and shared energy can create meaningful experiences on the dancefloor.

The event also features Kazuki Takahashi, A.Nu.Revolution, and Kindred, building a lineup that moves through different textures and intensities. Across the night, the sound travels from melodic house into darker, harder, and more hypnotic techno territory.

 

Tina Technotic and Yukari Takehisa lead Longevity Rave

At the heart of Longevity Rave is the chemistry between Tina Technotic and Yukari. Together, they create a dancefloor experience that feels emotional, immersive, and physically charged.

Tina Technotic discovered DJing later in life and has since become an inspiring figure for people who once thought it was too late to follow a creative path. Based in London, she combines high energy electronic sets with a wider interest in longevity, wellbeing, and the transformative power of collective joy.

Yukari brings a complementary energy to the project. Her connection to rave culture began during a lonely period in her life, when dancefloors became places of community, confidence, and belonging. Today, that personal history is reflected in her style, which fuses fast paced techno with global influences, euphoric movement, and emotional release.

 

A club concept built around joy, wellbeing and connection

What makes Longevity Rave stand out is its wider cultural ambition. The event does not frame nightlife only as escape. Instead, it reimagines the club as a place where music and movement can actively support wellbeing and social connection.

That idea speaks to a growing reality. Many people feel increasingly isolated, spend more time behind screens, and crave forms of togetherness that feel real, energising, and human. In that context, Longevity Rave offers a different model for club culture, one rooted in presence, rhythm, and shared emotion.

Rather than relying on nostalgia, the event creates space for different generations to come together naturally through sound. That sense of collective synchrony is central to the project’s identity and message.

 

Read this next: DJ Who Started Her Career After 50 Turns Raves Into Longevity Science Research

 

The JoyScore Experiment brings science to the dancefloor

A major part of Longevity Rave is The JoyScore Experiment, a research initiative that studies how rhythm, movement, and shared musical experiences affect the brain, the heart, the immune system, and long term resilience.

Early trials connected to the project have already taken place in San Francisco and Roatan, Honduras, in partnership with wearable technology brands. The initiative also forms part of the research arm of the Playa AI project at Burning Man, which explores how joy, health, and longevity intersect.

People attending the London event will be invited to sign up as volunteer participants for future sessions. As the study develops, it aims to contribute to a broader understanding of the social exposome, examining how social and environmental experiences shape human health over time. This wider framework is linked to the Human Exposome Project.

 

More than a trend in healthier nightlife

Although the project connects with the wider shift toward healthier nightlife, Longevity Rave does not position itself as a sober party or a clean rave format. Its goal is not to remove the emotional intensity of club culture. Its goal is to rethink how that intensity can support wellbeing instead of excess.

This distinction gives the event a stronger identity. The focus remains on music, atmosphere, and release, but within a framework that values connection, vitality, and long term health.

The project also addresses what it describes as techno isolation, a form of modern disconnection that can affect both emotional wellbeing and quality of life. In response, Longevity Rave places collective energy at the centre of the dancefloor experience.

 

A lineup that expands the sound of Longevity Rave

Beyond its two co founders, Longevity Rave brings together artists with distinct musical perspectives.

Kazuki Takahashi, based in Berlin, blends groovy instrumentals with heavy and hypnotic beats, creating immersive dancefloor journeys with both precision and atmosphere. A.Nu.Revolution moves fluidly through house, techno, and deeper club sounds, bringing a style shaped by travel and diverse influences. Kindred adds a live dimension to the lineup by combining electronic production with vocal and melodic elements, creating emotionally charged moments across the night.

This mix of approaches strengthens the event’s identity and helps shape a dancefloor that feels both expansive and intentional.

 

Why Longevity Rave stands out in 2026

Some nights stand out because they offer more than entertainment. They create a lasting sense of release, presence, and connection. That is the idea behind Longevity Rave.

With Tina Technotic and Yukari at the centre, the event arrives as both a club experience and a cultural statement. It shows how electronic music can still be powerful, physical, and transformative while opening new conversations around wellbeing, community, and the future of nightlife.

 

Lineup

Yukari

Tina Technotic

Kazuki Takahashi

A.Nu.Revolution

Kindred

 

Longevity Rave event details

Event: Longevity Rave

Date: Saturday, March 21

Time: 6 PM to 2 AM

Venue: Hackney Bridge, London

Tickets: Resident Advisor

 

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