Long Night at the Museum started as a simple idea—what if we took the carefully curated approach we bring to our releases and applied it to a live experience? What if we found a venue that matched the intentionality of the music we work with?
The Museum of Solutions in Lower Parel normally closes at sunset, designed as it is for children’s learning and play. But after hours, something shifts. The interactive installations that usually spark young imaginations became backdrops for a different kind of discovery. We transformed a playground built for curious minds into a playground for curious ears.
Two sold-out nights at MuSo proved something we’ve been thinking about for a while: the right space changes everything.
“We wanted to create an environment where the music could breathe,” says Spryk, founder of Skip-a-beat and curator of Long Night at the Museum. “MuSo isn’t just about finding a cool space—it’s about finding the right space. Somewhere that adds to the music rather than competing with it.”
The building’s natural flow worked in our favor. Multiple levels meant multiple sonic environments—ambient explorations upstairs, deeper electronic textures on the main floor, with spaces to move between sounds as your mood shifted.
We kept the production focused. Good sound systems in the right places. Lighting that enhanced rather than overwhelmed. Local food partners brought their A-game—handcrafted momos, inventive takes on South Indian street food, cocktails mixed with care using regional spirits. A small market area featured local publishers, vinyl collectors, and artists selling zines and culture packs. Nothing excessive, just things that felt connected to the music and the moment.
Both nights sold out, but more importantly, people stayed. They moved between rooms, had conversations, discovered new sounds. The crowd wasn’t performing being there—they were just there, present with the music and each other. Each artist on the lineup brought something distinct. Moments of ambient drift gave way to bass that made the floors vibrate, with enough unpredictability to keep the night feeling alive rather than programmed.



Long Night at the Museum isn’t meant to be a regular club night or a one-off experiment. It’s part of a longer conversation we’re having about how music gets experienced in Mumbai. Not trying to fit into existing categories, but creating space for the kind of listening and community that our city’s electronic music deserves.
The Museum of Solutions partnership makes sense because both organizations are interested in what happens when you give people the right environment to explore. For them, it’s about learning and creativity. For us, it’s about music and connection. Turns out there’s significant overlap.
We’re planning the next Long Night at the Museum with the same approach—careful curation, intentional partnerships, and respect for both the music and the people who come to hear it. Follow @skipabeat.in and @museumofsolutions for announcements. These nights are intimate by design, so early attention is advised.