Paying Pioneers Properly: Stewarding Lineage With Respect
Synopsis: Modern drum ‘n’ bass, dubstep, and bass music festivals owe a great debt to the pioneers who laid the groundwork for these genres. Yet all too often, heritage artists are treated as token nostalgia acts – underpaid, given poor set times, or minimal support. This guide lays out how festival producers around the world can honor musical pioneers with respect – from budgeting beyond token fees to giving prime stage slots and preserving their stories. By stewarding your scene’s lineage, you not only pay tribute to the past but also strengthen your festival’s cultural credibility for the future.
Budget Beyond Token Fees for Heritage Acts
When crafting a festival budget, allocate a fair share to heritage artists. It’s tempting to save costs by offering pioneers only token fees, assuming their draw is smaller than current stars. However, paying pioneers properly is an investment in your festival’s reputation and the genre’s longevity. Festival producers should value these artists’ decades of contribution – many laid the tracks (literally and figuratively) that today’s headliners build upon.
- Fair Compensation: Research industry rates and be prepared to offer respectable fees. A pioneer might not demand an exorbitant sum, but underpaying them sends the wrong message. For example, when UK jungle legend Goldie or dubstep originators like Digital Mystikz are on the bill, ensure their fee reflects their iconic status. Their presence adds immense credibility and can draw dedicated fans and media attention.
- Value Over ROI: Don’t measure a heritage act’s worth only by immediate ticket sales. Their influence on your scene often spans generations. Cultivating goodwill by treating pioneers well can pay off in long-term loyalty from core audiences. Think of it as honoring a foundational figure – much like a film festival would honor a legendary director as a guest of honor. This raises your event’s profile and appeals to those who respect the genre’s history.
- Budgeting Tips: Consider earmarking a percentage of talent budget for legacy acts. If funds are tight, it’s better to book one less mid-tier artist than to underfund a pioneer. Some festivals even seek arts grants or sponsorships to support cultural heritage appearances. For instance, a city council or cultural fund might sponsor a performance by a formative artist to celebrate the genre’s roots in that region.
- Global Perspective: Around the world, respecting pioneers is universally well-received. In the UK, where drum & bass was born, fans expect vets like Fabio & Grooverider or LTJ Bukem to be treated like the royalty they are. In New Zealand, the Northern Bass festival’s lineup deliberately blends veteran acts like Goldie with newer local talent (www.burgerfuel.com) to both educate and excite the crowd. By budgeting for pioneers everywhere from Mexico City to Mumbai, festival organizers show that the culture’s history is valued on a global scale.
Give Prime Set Times and Top-Notch Tech (Not Just Nostalgia Slots)
Booking a pioneer isn’t enough – how you schedule and support them makes all the difference. Too often, heritage artists get relegated to early-day “nostalgia slots” with short set times and basic production. To truly honor lineage, treat their performance as a highlight, not an afterthought:
- Prime Placement: Offer pioneers prominent set times. This could mean a headline or pre-headline slot on a major stage, or a special highlight set in the evening when the crowd is peaking. Even if your event follows the tradition of a “legend” daytime slot (as at Glastonbury’s famous Sunday afternoon Legends slot), back it with fanfare and expect a big audience. These acts can draw massive crowds when given a respected platform – for example, 80-year-old Rod Stewart drew a huge audience and delivered a vibrant 90-minute show in Glastonbury’s legends slot (www.reuters.com). The key is framing it as a must-see event, not background music.
- Adequate Set Length: Ensure heritage performers get enough time to shine. Many pioneers are DJs known for lengthy, journey-building sets or bands with deep catalogs. A 30-minute token set does them no justice. If a techno pioneer or a jungle DJ needs at least an hour to properly do their thing, accommodate that. Giving them a fuller set also signals that they’re an integral part of the festival, not just a quick homage.
- Strong Technical Support: Roll out the best production for these acts. That means top-quality sound systems, skilled audio engineers, and any specific gear they require. If a veteran drum & bass DJ still spins vinyl records, arrange for well-calibrated turntables, fresh needles, and isolation pads to prevent skips. If a dub legend needs a certain mixing board or extra subwoofers to deliver that chest-rattling bass, make it happen. Investing in proper tech not only shows respect but also ensures the performance is stellar for the audience.
- Avoid Pitfalls: Learn from past oversights. Placing a legendary artist on a distant stage with poor sound or a midday slot with little audience sets everyone up for disappointment. It can be disheartening for the artist and a missed opportunity for the festival. Instead, integrate them into the main program. For instance, if you have multiple stages, you might dedicate one evening to a “Heritage Takeover,” where pioneers play on the best stage with full production. Many successful festivals do this: Outlook Festival in Croatia has been known to end a night with a “special historical set” by a veteran (like jungle selector DJ Randall) on a prime stage, so the legend closes out with the recognition they deserve (radio1.hr).
- Hospitality Matters: Also consider scheduling with the artist’s comfort in mind. An older artist might appreciate not going on at 3 AM. If possible, offer them a preferred slot and provide hospitality that acknowledges their seniority (comfortable green room, easy transport, etc.). These details ensure the pioneer can perform at their best, and it sends a message to everyone onsite that this artist is a valued guest.
Capture Oral Histories for Your Archive
Every pioneer artist is a walking library of music history. When you invite them to perform, you have a golden opportunity to capture their stories and insights for posterity. Don’t let it slip by. Smart festival organizers use the occasion to document and archive the lineage:
- Backstage Interviews: Schedule time to interview heritage artists on video or audio while they’re at your festival. This could be a casual backstage chat or a formal Q&A session in front of a small audience (some festivals host daytime talks or workshops for this purpose). Compile these oral histories into an archive – a priceless resource for fans and future promoters alike. Imagine conducting a 20-minute talk with a dubstep originator about how the scene evolved – that interview could later be released as a mini-documentary or podcast episode, extending the impact of their presence.
- Leverage Media Partnerships: If you have media partners or press attending, facilitate interviews that focus on the artist’s legacy. A seasoned event organizer might coordinate with a music journalist to do a feature on the pioneer’s career, timed with their festival appearance. This not only honors the artist but also provides content to promote your festival’s commitment to the culture’s history.
- Archive Performances: With the artist’s permission, record their set – especially if it’s a rare or special performance. Some festivals maintain archives of legendary sets as part of their brand heritage. For example, when a foundational drum & bass DJ plays a classics set, having that on record (audio or video) adds to the festival’s legacy, and can be shared (rights permitting) to engage audiences online.
- Educational Material: Consider creating educational write-ups or short videos about these pioneers for your website or program. If you have an official blog (like Ticket Fairy’s promoter blog or your own festival blog), publish a piece about the artist’s contributions and highlights from the interview. Over time, you build a repository of lineage knowledge that associates your festival with cultural depth and awareness.
- Global Storytelling: Be mindful and inclusive in whose histories you capture. The bass music scene is worldwide – from the origins in Jamaican sound system culture and UK underground raves, to later adoptions in places like North America, Europe, Asia, and Africa. Try to record stories from pioneers of different regions. A Singapore drum & bass veteran or a Mexico City bass crew founder have unique perspectives that enrich the global narrative. By saving these stories, you’re effectively creating a living history of the genre that new generations of producers and fans can learn from.
Pair Pioneers with Next-Gen Artists (B2B and Beyond)
One of the most powerful ways to honor pioneers is to bridge them with the next generation. In dance music, a popular approach is arranging back-to-back (B2B) DJ sets where a pioneer and a younger star share the decks. This creates a literal and symbolic hand-off of knowledge – and it can result in an electrifying performance.
- B2B Sets Across Generations: Curate at least one intergenerational B2B in your lineup. For example, pair a first-wave dubstep DJ with a hot new bass producer, or have a jungle/drum & bass originator spin alongside a fresh talent from the current wave. The contrast in style and selection, unified by mutual respect, often gives the crowd a one-of-a-kind experience. Outlook Festival embraced this by hosting label-curated sessions where OGs played alongside newer names – one year saw dubstep pioneer Youngsta go B2B with duo Truth (then rising stars) and iconic jungle DJs tag-teaming with modern producers (radio1.hr). Fans still talk about those sets, because they witnessed history and future colliding in real time.
- Mentorship on Stage: When arranging such pairings, facilitate an intro between the artists beforehand. Often the younger artist is influenced by the elder, and they’ll jump at the chance to prepare a set together. Encourage them to plan a narrative – perhaps alternating between classic tracks and new releases, or each DJ picking some of the other’s famous tunes to play. This mutual tribute can be magic. The pioneer might break out rare anthems that inspired the genre, while the younger artist brings modern energy and techniques (like live remixing or controllerism) to the mix.
- Collaborative Live Performances: B2Bs are common for DJs, but don’t stop there. For live acts or bands, you can curate collaborations – maybe a legacy MC or vocalist joining a new producer’s live set, or a classic band invited as guests during a younger band’s show. At a bass music festival, this could look like a veteran reggae toaster doing a surprise appearance during a contemporary dubstep act’s set, bridging dub and dubstep live on stage.
- Workshops and Masterclasses: Another intergenerational transfer of knowledge can happen off-stage. Since you have pioneers and new artists in one place, consider hosting a workshop where the pioneer shares production or DJ tips with up-and-comers. This could be a small session at your festival’s camp or a local music school in parallel with your event. It’s a goodwill gesture that extends the pioneer’s impact beyond their performance.
- Community Building: By publicly pairing pioneers with next-gen talent, you also signal to the community that your festival isn’t just about booking whoever is trending this year – it’s about building continuity. Audiences appreciate seeing their favorite new artist acknowledge the trailblazers. It humanizes the pioneer to younger fans and validates the newcomers in the eyes of old-school heads. The whole scene becomes more cohesive. Many successful festival producers note that these cross-generational moments are what create goosebumps and social media buzz, as they appeal to both nostalgia and novelty at once.
Credit Lineage on Programs and Screens
Honoring pioneers also means telling their story within your event’s narrative. Give context and credit so that all attendees know whose shoulders they – and the music – are standing on. There are a few impactful ways to do this:
- Program Notes & Artist Bios: In your festival program, website artist profiles, or mobile app, highlight the lineage. Don’t just list a pioneer as “DJ So-and-so (UK)” – take the opportunity to add a line like “Jungle pioneer, active since 1993, mentor to XYZ” or “Dubstep originator who influenced today’s bass music sound.” Drawing these connections educates the audience. A drum & bass fan in their early 20s might not realize that Ray Keith or DJ Storm helped create the genre’s foundation – your materials can enlighten them, increasing appreciation. Keep the tone respectful and celebratory, avoiding any language that sounds outdated or patronizing.
- Visual Tributes: Use your festival screens and signage to credit lineage in real time. Before a pioneer’s set, you can display a short video montage of their career highlights or a simple graphic with facts (“Know Your Roots: Goldie – pioneer of drum & bass, founder of Metalheadz label”). Some festivals run short interstitial videos between acts; this is a perfect slot for a 30-second homage to a heritage artist or the scene’s history. Be creative – perhaps show a “family tree” of how subgenres evolved from an original style, with the pioneer’s name at the root branching to newer artists who followed.
- Stage MC Introductions: If your stage has an MC or host, have them publicly acknowledge the pioneer’s influence when introducing them. A few heartfelt sentences can set the tone: e.g., “Up next is a legend who paved the way for every artist on this stage tonight. Give it up for the one and only…”. This hypes the crowd and signals that this set is special. In genres like reggae, dub, and D&B, it’s common for MCs to big up the foundation artists – carry that tradition into the festival setting.
- Acknowledging Cultural Roots: Lineage isn’t only individual – it’s cultural. Bass music genres often have roots in specific communities (think Jamaican sound system culture’s impact on dubstep and jungle, or the Detroit roots of techno). Show respect by acknowledging those roots in your festival communications. For instance, if you host a dubstep stage, a brief note on the LED screen or in the program about “Born from London’s underground and Jamaican dub plates” connects the dots. It demonstrates cultural awareness and respect, important for international audiences and for avoiding the impression that your festival is appropriating without credit.
- Awards and Honors: Consider instituting a small honor ceremony if appropriate. It could be as simple as presenting a commemorative plaque on stage to a pioneer for their contribution to the scene. Many film and arts festivals do lifetime achievement awards; music festivals can do something similar in a less formal way. For example, at a final day briefing or on social media, publicly thank the pioneers who performed, naming them “Festival Honorary Legends” for that edition. Such gestures, even symbolic, reinforce that these artists are not just lineup filler – they are part of the festival’s story.
Balancing Old and New for Any Festival Size
Whether you’re producing a boutique 500-person underground gathering or a massive international festival, the principles of respecting lineage hold true, but the execution can scale:
- Small Festivals: With tighter budgets and niche crowds, you might book only one or two heritage headliners. Make them count. For a smaller event, a pioneer can be the centerpiece of your marketing (“All-night set by house music legend X”). You can integrate them deeply: maybe host a BBQ meet-and-greet or an in-depth workshop with the pioneer, since smaller events can afford more intimate interactions. A local or regional festival should also honor local pioneers – the DJs or crews who built your country or city’s scene decades ago. For example, a bass festival in India might invite one of the first Indian drum & bass DJs to play and share stories, alongside an international pioneer. This blends global and local lineage and can attract older fans from the area who remember the early days.
- Large Festivals: With multi-stage lineups, you have room to involve numerous pioneers across genres. Curate a dedicated “Legends Stage” or sprinkle heritage acts on every stage, giving each genre representation of its originators. Big festivals can also facilitate unique collaborations that smaller ones might not have the resources for – such as commissioning a special performance. A case in point: a festival could team up a pioneer with an orchestra to reinvent classic tracks (much like Fabio & Grooverider joined The Outlook Orchestra for a celebrated live history of drum & bass (outlookfestival.com)). Large events can push lineage celebration to the press as a major narrative: “Festival X celebrates 30 years of bass music history with a showcase of pioneers,” which is a strong story for media and can attract sponsorship from brands that want to align with music heritage.
- Audience Communication: Tailor how you highlight lineage based on your ticket buyers. A younger-skewing EDM festival might need more contextual explanation (“this artist inspired the very sounds you hear in today’s hits”), possibly using social media posts or short videos ahead of the event to introduce the pioneers to those who aren’t familiar. A more mature audience festival (like one that’s been running for decades) may already have knowledgeable fans – for them, simply giving pioneers prominence and respect on site will be appreciated without over-explaining.
- Cultural Sensitivity: If your festival tours to different countries or locations, adjust the lineage narrative to include the host location’s role in the scene. Perhaps when your bass festival lands in Spain, you honor the Spanish breakbeat or jungle pioneers in addition to the global names. When in USA, maybe acknowledge the American rave founders or hip-hop’s influence on bass music. This localized respect makes each edition special and engages the local community of artists and attendees.
Key Takeaways
- Invest in Legacy: Allocate real budget for pioneer artists – don’t insult them with token fees. Valuing their contributions financially sets a tone of respect.
- Spotlight Their Sets: Schedule heritage acts at prime times with ample set lengths and full production support. Treat their performances as festival highlights, not side attractions (www.reuters.com).
- Technical & Hospitality Support: Go the extra mile to meet their technical needs (quality sound, gear, soundcheck). Comfort and respect backstage translate to better onstage delivery.
- Document the History: Record interviews, sets, and stories from pioneers during the festival. Build an archive of oral histories and footage that preserves the genre’s lineage for future generations.
- Bridge Generations: Create opportunities for pioneers and next-gen artists to collaborate (B2B sets, live collabs). These moments transfer knowledge and ignite crowds with a mix of nostalgia and discovery (radio1.hr).
- Publicly Honor Lineage: In festival programs, on stage, and on social media, credit the pioneers and outline their influence. Educate your audience about the genre’s roots and give credit where it’s due.
- Universal Principle: Whether a local niche event or a global mega-festival, respecting and showcasing music lineage enriches the experience. It’s not just ethically right – it adds authenticity and depth to your festival’s brand.
By paying pioneers properly and celebrating them visibly, festival producers become custodians of culture – ensuring the music’s past is honored as it propels into the future. This stewardship builds a bridge between generations of artists and fans, making the festival more than just a party; it becomes a living tribute to the genre’s journey.