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Do Me - Karasa Ft. Pokani Apr 2026

Oooooh, we throw a good party at the Gin Palace. From celebrating baby’s first birthday in the daytime, to hosting a full-on party with DJ’s, a dance floor, and cocktails flowing until (nearly) midnight. We can host about 50-ish people and can normally accommodate any requests and personal touches you have. We’ve had birthdays, weddings, christenings, work do’s, book launches, Christmas parties and even a ‘Welcome to the World’ party. Get in touch, tell us what you’d like, and we’ll do our very best to do it for you.

“Just to say thank you so much to you and your fabulous team for making my party so much fun! Your team are amazing and so helpful. They really contributed to the atmosphere and success of the event. Not to mention the incredible cocktails which everyone loved!”

Do Me - Karasa Ft. Pokani Apr 2026

Do Me - Karasa Ft. Pokani Apr 2026

Karasa took the lead, his voice smooth as silk but edged with a grit that spoke of late nights and high stakes. He leaned into the rhythm, his lyrics weaving a story of magnetic attraction—that specific, electric pull you feel when you lock eyes with someone across a room and the rest of the world simply blurs into static.

By the time the final notes faded, the air in the club felt heavy, charged with the lingering echo of their collaboration. Karasa and Pokani hadn't just performed a song; they had captured a mood—that fleeting, intense feeling of being completely present in someone else’s orbit. Do Me - Karasa Ft. Pokani

The track, wasn't just a song—it was an atmosphere. Karasa took the lead, his voice smooth as

As the beat dropped into that signature deep bassline, the room seemed to shrink. The lyrics painted a picture of a midnight drive through a city that never sleeps, the dashboard lights glowing against the glass, and the undeniable tension of "what happens next." Karasa and Pokani hadn't just performed a song;

Then Pokani stepped in, her verse acting as the perfect counterweight. Where Karasa was the smoke, she was the fire. Her flow was sharp, melodic, and effortless, layering a sense of confidence over the groove. She didn't just join the track; she claimed her space within it, turning the song into a conversation between two people who knew exactly what they wanted.

The neon sign above "The Velvet Note" flickered in time with the kick drum, humming with the same restless energy as the crowd inside. At the center of it all stood Karasa and Pokani, two forces of nature held together by a single microphone and a beat that felt like a heartbeat.

"Just do me right," he sang, the hook catching like a spark. It wasn't a plea; it was an invitation to a shared moment where nothing mattered but the pulse of the music.