TECHNO titans, house heroes, skint students, discerning dance fans.

They all come to one place: the Sub Club.

It's the one place in Glasgow that consistently gets it right.

For more than 25 years it has attracted the biggest names in electronic music and that pedigree continues to this day.

As well as hosting world-famous DJs, producers and bands such as… well, where do we begin?

Derrick Carter, Four Tet, Franz Ferdinand, Len Faki, Jeff Mills, Carl Craig, Basement Jaxx, Sugar Hill Gang and LCD Soundsystem are just a small selection of those who have graced the Jamaica Street basement's stage.

But the club also has a very deliberate policy of promoting the best in upcoming and locally-sourced talent.

Take Tuesday night's party, iAM. It's run by Beta and Kappa, two youngsters (just 23 and 27 themselves) who play a chaotic rammy of electro, disco, hip-hop and whatever else sounds good.

It's a student night - but it's as far from the cheesy antics at Campus or Driftwood as it's possible to get.

This is a proper night for lovers of electronic music: the sounds are eclectic, the clientele diverse and super-cool, and it invariably ends up in a right rammy.

To think of the amount of Wednesday morning lectures missed yesterday as a direct consequence is almost frightening.

It kicked off with lascivious funk jams and some unexpected rockabilly, the sign behind the bar proclaiming iAM: four hours of power.

By later it had moved into the banging, squelching, woozy electro that it is famous for, and it was easy to see the night's mass appeal.

At this rate, it'll go the same way as Subculture and become a proper institution: one of the elite fraternity of respected Glasgow clubs. It deserves its place handsomely.