A student is launching a boredom-busting Harrow party that will swap between two juxtaposing styles of music each fortnight.

It is hoped Trinity Bar in Station Road will be packed to the rafters for the first cheap-as-chips Bleach Presents... from next Wednesday, February 25, onwards.

"It's going to be indie bands one week and a fortnight later it will be R'n'B and urban beats," says University of Westminter commercial music student Jess Partridge (pictured).

"There's a lot of people in Harrow saying there's nothing to do and they need more going on.

"I spoke to Chris from the Trinity and he was incidentally looking to fill Wednesday nights and I was quite willing to give it a go.

"It's worked out pretty well. It's a really good venue - it has a great sound system. It may be small but it has an old fashioned bar feel to it."

Jess, 20, has been scouring the internet for top class acts - "from twee to heavy rock but no metal", she clarifies - in order to shape the first few bills so they compliment one another.

"It's personal taste really. I try to make the bands fit together rather than putting on random bands," she says.

"For the R'n'B night there will be DJs but generally we'll have people I know from university who are doing well."

West Country girl Jess's Bleach Promotions company, which boasts spin-off online Bleach Magazine as part of the growing brand, already runs an established gig residency at a Bristol bar to which the new night at Trinity Bar will become a sister live music night.

She says: "I started off about a year ago putting on nights in Bristol for charity with a group of friends and when that died out, we were asked to do a magazine with someone else.

"However, the project was badly run and didn't get off the ground so we took the best people and started a magazine by ourselves."

Jess hopes that the low cost of entry - £2 for students and £3 for anyone else - will draw fans of live music:

"It will be a really good time. Hopefully it will be completely packed," she says. "There's a massive market for this type of music in Harrow."