Soul singer, beatboxer and all-out showman, this electronic livewire certainly knows how to get his audience's minds boggling at his "out there" live shows.

Jamie, originally from Brighton, and his co-conspirator Pablo Fiasco have spent the past couple of years perfecting an avant garde whirlwind of electronic sampling and loops, soul singing and haphazard visuals involving video footage and live camera shots of the night.

To add a further eccentric spark Jamie also tends to wear his self-styled media suits - a mac covered in double-sided sticky tape with CDs and magnetic tape from videos stuck to it.

"We discovered a while ago these materials look great," enthuses Jamie. "They really shine. It kind of looks like a glam outfit - it's quite bling. It shows what you can learn from watching Blue Peter as a kid.

"The show is a human funk tornado. My thing is very much making it up as I go along. It's a blank canvas before I go on and then it's a case of cooking up all the music and images live. There's a lot of cabaret and fun - I don't like to take myself too seriously."

Yet with standing ovations from The Royal Festival Hall to the dirtiest basement in Berlin and even the Brighton Dome, where he performed with the London Sinfonietta last year, others seem to take him rather seriously. He has also just released a new album, Mystify, a twisted R'n'B classic that retains the emotion punch of Marvin Gaye and Stevie Wonder and the zing of Prince.

"I thought it was about time I hung up my cloak of electronic darkness in the cupboard. I've still got it, it's just being repaired," jokes Jamie.

"I'm so bad at keeping interested in any one thing for any one time, so I thought I would do this record as a change. I wanted something that was soulful rather than the usual demented electronic thing."

Jamie is also looking forward to catching up with old mates when he returns to his home town after several years in Berlin. He began his career here with digi-funk outfit Super_Collider and early techno experiments at The Beach, where he had a residency.

"One thing which frustrated me about Brighton was it was hard to do something that wasn't really mainstream," he recalls. "These days, though, it seems Brighton is home to all these great bands.

"I would consider coming back. Out of everywhere in England, it's the only place I could imagine living. I got pissed a lot, though. The amount of booze I consumed was alarming.

But then Berlin is similar in that way. Maybe I'm just drawn to these decadent places."

Starts 8pm, tickets cost £10/£8. Call 01273 709709