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Latest DJ mix

Dub Pistols DJ Barry Ashworth has just recorded a brand new mix for you to get your ears around
Full track list
Beat Assassins – ft The Ragga……………….Pressure
King Yoof…………………………………Soundboy
Freestylers……………………………….Rebel Lion
Reggae Roast Soundsystem …………………..Murder (Benny page mix)
Ed Solo…………………………………..Super Subs
Freestylers & Deekline……………………..Mofos
Brian Brainstorm…………………………..So Easy
KING YOOF…………………………………Soundboy Balling
Saxxon& TI………………………………..Ganja dance
Saxxon & Liondub…………………………..Real Sound Killa
Featurecast……………………………….Trigger Finger
Beat Assassins…………………………….Bust up Ya Lighter
KING YOOF…………………………………Pack up your sound
Brian Brainstorm…………………………..Anything & Everything
Ed Solo…………………………………..Mini Wob
Freestylers & Deekline……………………..Ray Gun

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Equinox Festival 2018

26172734_1912925115689682_289306393153707336_oDub Pistols head up to Lincolnshire this Friday to headline the stunning Equinox Festival.

Equinox Festival – A gathering of the tribes. Performance, art, interaction and education for all. Set inside a hill, in the breathtaking Lincolnshire Wolds. Six stages representing all musical tastes, incredible lightshows, family area, fireshows, workshops. For the people not for profit.
ABOUT EQUINOX
Brought to you by the old Alchemy crew….the workers now run the show and are taking it into their third year with their own festival Equinox. For the people, not for profit.

We united to continue with what we all believe is a beautiful thing – Where else do all the tribes come together and celebrate? Didn’t we put on the best party in the universe?! 2016/2017 has shown everyone just what we can do and we plan on doing it all again, even better. So who’s up for another one?!?

There’ll be over one a hundred bands and DJs again on our six stages, including our two dance tents – Sunrise and Lunar, with their crazy decor and stage shows to match. Our solar powered Soundscape stage, The Crispy Disco stage – dedicated to one of the original members of the tribe – Crispian Baker, The Busk Stop and much more! Line-up to be announced, but as ever, we’ll have something for everyone.

32289890_1992202204428639_1437590438042140672_oFire shows created by a pyromaniac genius, workshops and heritage crafts the like of which many of you will never have seen before, healing area, our fire pit and our all new Children’s Area for 2018, co-hosted by Gypsy Pysky & Foolhardy Circus will keep the little ones entertained.

Food and drink? Still bring your own if you want, but our traders will be tempting you with a great selection of food at affordable prices for meat eaters and vegan alike and anything from real ale or a cheeky cocktail or a smoothie to perk you up from that night before, to handmade crafts collected worldwide and glow sticks and ridiculousness too tempting to walk by.

So come join us, show your support for the festival that just won’t stop and the collective tribe that you are part of each September.

Welcome to Equinox !!

Medieval Chemistry Ltd is a not for profit, social enterprise and its main aim is to organise community based events- this started with an event in September 2016 with the same energy and vibe that Alchemy was famous for. Equinox Festival was born.

The company works in partnership with the local authority and local community to ensure well managed, safe and enjoyable events in Lincolnshire involving local businesses and people.

WHAT WE’RE ABOUT:
We aim…

● To provide access to training, new skills, work experience opportunities and an artistic platform not readily available on the high street to a wide range of people.
● To positively unite and integrate people in comfortable surroundings through music, art and conversation.
● To provide a wide variety of support to the community and local businesses.
● To introduce and promote up and coming artists and musicians, especially locally!

Returning To Cluj

40875954_2681719322053276_3880714461895458816_nDub Pistols will be returning to their favourite club in Romania on November 16th 2018
The band will be performing at the awesome Form/Space club in Cluj.
Band leader Barry Ashworth said “Form is one of the best clubs in Europe and the Cluj crowd always make it a special place to play”
This is going to be a massive night tickets on sale now
https://www.facebook.com/events/239855973382649/

Review from Victorious Festival

40131032_10156511927578326_4474858505089581056_nnice review from our show last Sunday Victorious Festival courtesy of eFestivals.co.uk
“If Gomez scaled down and took shelter against the rain, Dub Pistols took the alternative approach. Setting up the band in the far corner of the stage, frontmen Barry Ashworth and Seanie Tee chose to embrace the rain, and happily got as soaked as the audience, spending almost as much time down with the crowd as they did up on stage. Dub Pistols are a quintessential festival group, and their upbeat Ska/dance/hip hop mashup always goes down well whatever the weather. It wasn’t long before the crowd was probably the liveliest it had been all weekend, and get fully into the festival groove. The bands finisher ‘Mucky Weekend’ has never seemed more appropriate in the rain, and helped warm up the damp and muddy audience.”
Full review https://www.efestivals.co.uk/festivals/victorious/2018/review.shtml

Beautiful days Review

39535958_10156637847556660_6753925339560280064_oReview of Dub Pistols live at Beautiful Days Festival
“We saw DUB PISTOLS arrive onsite earlier in the day and I made a beeline to chat to Barry Ashworth who told me that they had just played at an incredible festival in Italy and was looking forward to tearing up Beautiful Days in the only way that Dub Pistols can! I was handed a cold beer in their dressing room as the band proceeded to get changed into their stage gear, I took a seat and continued our conversation, Barry chatting about how he’s had a hectic but enjoyable year and the rest of the band saying how much they’d been looking forward to today’s show. They took to the stage bang on schedule and performed a tremendous set, the entire field was bouncing along to their music. Their final offering just HAD to be “Mucky Weekend” and it literally WENT OFF! I don’t think I’ve ever seen so many people leaping around like crazed animals at 4:30pm on a Sunday!
Full review
https://www.musomuso.co.uk/reviews/beautiful-days-festival-was-amazing-read-our-live-review

King Of The Jungle

thumbnail_kingofthejungle_white_fabric_black+goldDub Pistols latest T-shir is now available in limited edition white from our online store.
Designed by Canadian artist Lowclass and printed on a Gildan Tee the design is available in both mens and ladies size
Just head over to our online store and order yours now for £18 delivered in the UK

Free Festival

Dub Pistols copyWe are playing Bedford River Festival this weekend, the second largest free festival in the UK! You can catch us on @The Pad Presents Main Stage at 9pm on Saturday 300,000 people expected
#Bedfordriverfestival

Dub Pistols looking forward to Bridport – July 13

BLAT-logo-3-black-300x159
The Dub Pistols have built a massive fanbase in the West Country by putting in the hours and respecting their audience. Barry Ashworth talks to Fergus Byrne about energy, music, football and music royalty—and, what could possibly go wrong?

33762806_10156422178676660_1519804470093938688_oOver the years it’s fair to say that Barry Ashworth, the driving force behind the Dub Pistols, might have owned up to a number of different chemical excuses for his boundless energy, but these days the bulk of his drive and stamina just comes from a natural source—his passion for music. ‘My Mum used to have to give me Valium to go to school to calm me down’ he jokes. ‘I’ve always been bouncing off walls. That’s just naturally in my personality.’

In July Barry brings the Dub Pistols to Bridport to headline at the Jurassic Fields Festival. It’s a gig he’s looking forward to. ‘The West Country seems to be our biggest catchment area in term of fanbase I think. When you go north there’s a lot more house music, but when you go more west, it’s a lot more urban and open-minded. Our sound seems to have connected and resonated with people and it’s been like that for quite a while. We do a lot of shows down that way every year.’

The band originally grew from Barry’s DJ career, which itself grew out of time spent running clubs in Ibiza and London. If it was possible to create an edited version of his life story it would start on a London council estate, take in teenage dreams of a being a footballer, include a broken leg in 1987 and a trip to Ibiza that changed his life. That was eventually followed by a million-dollar contract with Geffen records in America and the heady road to sex, drugs and rock ‘n roll. However, as luck would have it, Barry’s first shot at mega-stardom was interrupted by the attack on the twin towers of 9/11, as the Dub Pistols first album was due to be released there that week. Coincidentally having lyrics like ‘Submarine sinks fall from the sky/tallest buildings burn/oh how the mothers they cry,’ and ‘blowing up the White House like I was an alien in Independence Day’, the album was pulled and it never came out. Barry found himself back in London with an unexpected overdraft and one hell of a ‘what happened last night?’ feeling. He admits it had been some party though. Cut to today and the Dub Pistols have risen from the ashes of those dark days and built up a huge following by being one of the hardest working bands in the industry.

33772720_10155702686872689_2249037720217190400_oDub Pistols live performances are all about the crowd. ‘Our show is very much built on energy and crowd participation’ says Barry. ‘We feed off the crowd as much as they feed off us.’ He explained that every band he has ever been into, from punk to ska, is always about energy. But that doesn’t mean it’s not also about the music. ‘For me, music is the soundtrack to life. Whether it takes you up or whether it takes you down, you can always reference different parts of your life through the soundtrack of that time. Making music is something that I love and always have done.’

Although the soundtrack to his early years included people like Elvis Costello, The Clash and Blondie et al, his Dad had different ideas about what he should be listening to. ‘When I’d come home drunk on a Sunday and be upstairs playing reggae, he’d drag me downstairs and play me Lynyrd Skynyrd and Rory Gallagher and say “that’s not music, this is”. My Mum was more into Motown and Soul’. That’s not to say Barry didn’t listen to anything other than punk, reggae and ska, he admits to a very eclectic taste in music. ‘Bob Dylan was a soundtrack for a time’ he says. ‘From that, you learn a lot about songwriting and lyrics and you become a bit more socially aware. And my grandmother was a Scouser, so there’s a heavy influence from there with the Beatles as well. My grandmother was carried down to You’ll Never Walk Alone’.

Talk about his Scouser background and the Liverpool theme tune brings us neatly to the other passion in his life—football. That broken leg in 1987 brought him to Ibiza to recuperate and he readily admits that the drug scene and the fantastic mix of music on the island put an end to his football dreams. However, it didn’t curtail his passion for the beautiful game. He is still a fanatical Liverpool supporter, but when it comes to the organisations that run the industry he practically spits out his views. ‘I hate the FA with a passion’ he says. ‘I hate FIFA with a passion, because they are, to me, so corrupt.’ He believes the teams in the past such as those in the Beckham era and managers like Terry Venables could have kept England as contenders ‘but they just wanted “yes” boys. So it’s just really put me off international football.’

With the 2018 World Cup kicking off as we chat, it’s probably not the best time to be irritated with International football and Barry at least concedes that maybe there could be some hope. ‘I don’t actually think we’ve got the worst team in the world’ he says. ‘I think we’ve got quarter-finals in us. It really depends on what he (Gareth Southgate) sends out and how they decide to play. The good thing is none of them deserves an ego, cos let’s face it, they’ve been shit. The warm-up games they’ve struggled to win by one goal.’

By the time this goes to print we’ll all have a better idea of what England might achieve. However, regardless of the international football scene, Barry can’t help but throw a more amusing aside to the football chat, complaining that ‘every time there’s an international break, Liverpool seem to come back with our best players crocked, so I hate it.’

So, enough about football, but did a shot at mega-stardom in the music industry leave Barry or any other Dub Pistol with an ego the size of, say, Kanya West’s? No, not at all. Barry Ashworth is under no illusions about the slippery slope that fame and stardom offers. This is a hard-working band that pulls it all off by putting in the hours and loving what they do. As to mega-stardom, Barry is often quoted as saying they are ‘successfully unsuccessful’. He points out that the lack of international limelight means ‘you don’t get overkill and it doesn’t let your head get too big, because you have to live it real. The way that we have to travel and play, we’re never the spoilt superstars—we’ve never had people blowing smoke up our arse.’ That’s probably why the fans keep coming back and as he says, ‘the shows just get bigger and bigger—which is unbelievable after twenty years.’

Last year Barry got married, as it happens into music royalty. His wife’s mother, the late June Child was married to Mark Bolan and his wife’s Godfather is Elton John. ‘They were just a little bit more successful than me’ he laughs. So does he fancy the idea of being a bigger star? ‘Would I like to have my life analysed, considering what I’ve been up to?… Probably not’ he says. ‘I think I’d just be banged up. Staying just below the radar suits me just fine.’

20776759_10155623321911660_8397007838417566751_oLooking at the rest of the year it would seem that the Dub Pistols may be a little too busy to peek over any radar. As well as a seemingly never-ending trail of shows in the UK, there are gigs in Poland, Romania, Italy, the Netherlands and Portugal, and talk of shows in Mexico and New Zealand in the New Year. Not to mention the new album Dark Days, Dark Times, which Barry says is already ten tracks in, though not due out until early next year. Then there is also the band’s documentary What Could Possibly Go Wrong?, a history of the Dub Pistols so far, which, as Barry says, is hard to finish since the band is still going. He has set himself a target of the gig at this year’s Boomtown for the last bit of filming and hopes to get it finished before the end of the year.

In the meantime, there are still songs like Never Never, London Calling, Boom and Rising from the current album Crazy Diamonds that have found their way into the Dub Pistols live set. Simply, not to be missed.

Anyone who hasn’t yet managed to connect with a Dub Pistols gig should remedy that particular hole in their personal ozone as soon as possible. Now fully-fledged ‘festival favourites’ they will play at Jurassic Fields in Bridport on July 13th and Camp Bestival at Lulworth at the end of July, as well as Beautiful Days at Escot Park near Ottery St Mary in August. Find out more at http://www.bridportlife.co.uk/coming-up/dub-pistols-looking-forward-to-bridport-july-13/

Win Tickets to camp bestival

DfmMlPsVQAAxUrB.jpg-largeSuper excited to play at Camp Bestival in July! Want to win a family ticket*? Leave a comment with a song you want us to perform on our facebook page and we’ll pick the winner next Sunday 6pm More info:
campbestival.net

*A family ticket is for 2 adults and up to four children.

Link to our Facebook post
https://www.facebook.com/dub.pistols/?hc_ref=ARSdpSzVgzKmfhaeGwlhD1jBrGYOkwYGci5AgHdSAWltyFVlTCYNOWzBjHkODra6ppE&fref=nf