Two of the city’s most prominent house exports make up the billing for Saturday’s annual Sub Club Boat Party. First up: old-school Subbie honchos Harri and Dom, captains of the world’s longest-running underground house night Subculture. These two veteran spinners have been pumping out Detroit- and Chicago-influenced sounds for 22 years: “I’ve spent almost half my life playing every Saturday at the club,” said Harri back in 2014. “We’ve gotten to build something that's unique and something that's become a massive part of ours and other people’s lives.” These two really mean something to the city’s club culture, and with the Subbie itself closed for a refit, this is the last time they’ll be playing in Glasgow for two whole months - withdrawal symptoms incoming.

They’re joined by Dixon Avenue Basement Jams, the Southside label who found notoriety through throwing raucous parties in their basement flat on Dixon Avenue. They dish out rugged, acid-influenced, authentic electronica: “When we’re DJing together, we probably end up being a bit more banging than the kind of thing you’d hear on the label,” the duo’s Kenny Grieve told The Skinny. “It’s not on purpose; it’s just the way DJ sets tend to go. If you’re DJing with Dan [Lurinksy, aka Monox] you know it’s going to be monstrously banging at some point, anyway.” Sea legs and water wings at the ready, house fans.

Once back on dry land, the full crew will be drying off and docking up at their temporary holiday home, down by the river at Finnieston’s SWG3.

• Sub Club Boat Party, Saturday, Riverside Museum, 7pm – 11pm, £25

• Afterparty, Saturday, SWG3, 11pm – 3am, £10

One Night in Comeme

Some of the most subversive, peculiar and – most importantly – fun dance music of recent years has come from Comeme, the outsider label headed up by Chilean-born DJ Matias Aguayo. Described by Pitchfork as an “inveterate weirdo,” Aguayo won’t be at this Berkeley Suite label showcase on Saturday, but two of his Generals, Christian S and Borusiade, will be. The former is a house and techno veteran from Cologne who fell in love the the German city’s vibrant club scene in the ‘90s and never looked back. Borusiade, on the other hand, was one of the first female DJs to emerge from the Bucharest underground scene. She moved from the Romanian capital to Berlin to pursue her dark, obsessive sound, joining Comeme in 2015. She now hosts the series The Dreamcatcher on the label’s radio station, and travels the world playing weird tropical sounds and dark, industrial disco beats.

Almost by coincidence, the label’s Argentinian producer Ana Helder also appears on the bill at The Art School’s Night of the Jaguar tomorrow. Weird, freaky, groovy: the usual descriptors apply. Her “transcendental” latest EP Fiebra de Marte was a modern psychedelic disco monster: all deep, wobbling basslines and hypnotic vocals. Come get some at these unique, out-there parties.

The weekend’s other Berkeley Suite bash brings an authentic taste of the German capital to North Street. DJ/life partner duo Tama Sumo and Lakuti are residents at Panorama Bar and Süd Electronic respectively, and have been plying dark, pulsing sounds around Berlin since the ‘90s. Expect futuristic, sensual house vibes from two of Germany’s most respected DJs.

• Healthy with Tama Sumo, tomorrow, The Berkeley Suite, 11pm – 3am, £7

• Night of the Jaguar with Ana Helder, tomorrow, The Art School, 11pm – 3am, £7

• One Night in Comeme, Saturday, The Berkeley Suite, 11pm – 3am, £5

Paula Temple

Paula Temple makes “frazzled techno for sharp minds,” a prospect that doesn’t necessarily appeal to my scatterbrained tendencies but might to yours, dear reader. The Lancashire-born DJ has dabbled in everything from taps-aff rave to noise-influenced club work, but has spent much of the last decade out of the spotlight: doing work behind the scenes and in education. Now firmly back in the booth, she’s launched a label called Noise Manifesto and is bringing her nosebleed-inducing techno to clubs across the country: not before time. This intimate gig in Stereo’s sparse basement club is going to be a memorable one.

• Paula Temple, tomorrow, Stereo, 11pm – 3am, £10