The Journal
Community 6 min read

Five rooms, one scene

How a single rehearsal room in Mons turned into a network of artists who actually know each other.

Temple Studios
Musicians jamming together at Temple Studios

It started with one rehearsal room and a handful of bands who kept bumping into each other in the corridor. A borrowed cable here, a spare drummer there, a jam that ran until the early hours. That is how a scene begins: not with a launch, but with people in the same building at the same time.

Today Temple runs several rooms across the day and night, and the corridor is still where half the magic happens. A producer meets a topline writer. A solo artist finds a band. A DJ picks up a residency because someone heard them through the wall.

Built for the room, not the feed

The point was never to build an audience online. It was to make a place where the people who create can find each other in person, book a room together, and leave with something real.

That is what a scene is. Not a following, but a network of people who know each other’s work and want to make more of it. Five rooms, one scene, and the door is always open.

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