Lemon Jelly's followers will be given an extra helping from their record collection tonight.

Fred Deakin and Nick Franglen have moved on since Lost Horizons and will be performing tracks from their third album 64-95.

Based entirely on samples from their vast record collections, each track is built around a single snippet and given the full Jelly treatment. The band flip randomly between Euro house and R'n'B, with samples ranging from Seventies pop stars Gallagher and Lyle, Scottish post-punkers The Scars and heavy metallers the Masters of Reality.

Inspiration came from the success of their much-loved 7in Soft Rock, a re-working of the 1976 classic If You Leave Me Now from Chicago.

"After Lost Horizons, we wanted to turn the page a little so we came up with this idea of sampling tracks we really loved," explains Deakin.

"Some of them are very much based around the chorus, others have their moments."

One of Deakin's personal favourites is the track Don't Stop Now, which samples Atlantic Ocean's 1993 house anthem Waterfall.

"We had a lot of specific points to make on this record," he says. "It's much more eclectic than our previous albums. Good music transcends genres and we wanted to illustrate that by being as varied as possible and house producers always sample other people so we thought we'd sample them instead."

Named "64-95", after the span in years of the various samples, each track is as different as the last, prompting rave reviews from NME, Q and The Telegraph. The album also comes complete with a full DVD.

"I love playing in Brighton," says Deakin. "I've got lots of mates down there and it feels like a real Jelly heartland. I've played in Brighton fairly regularly and we're looking forward to it. It feels like we're playing to the Jelly faithful."

Starts 7.30pm, Tickets £15, Tel 01273 709709