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DEFENDED ARTISTS
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DUB PISTOLS

"The infamous Dub Pistols have just made their definitive record. 'Speakers and Tweeters' is a true realization of their mission- the mix theyve always been itching to create." DJMAG
"If youve not already got [Speakers and Tweeters] where have you been? If youve already sampled the delights of Barry Ashworths best album yet, were sure youll agree that its dubby, horn-drenched, sun- kissed grooves will sound great all summer long." IDJ
The Dub Pistols formed about a decade ago when Barry Ashworth got together with Jason OBryan in west London. Jason had been half of Wall Of Sound act Ceasefire with Derek Dahlarge, while Barry was in indie-dance band Déjà Vu who had a hit with the old Woodentops song Why Why Why back in the day. Finding they shared a love of The Clash, The Specials, Andy Weatherall, King Tubby and Public Enemy the band launched with a string of party-rockin singles like Cyclone, Westway and Theres Gonna Be A Riot and landed a million dollar record deal with major label Geffen. "It was the start of a beautiful nightmare," says Barry.
Chewing up hip-hop, dub, techno, ska and punk and spitting them out in a renegade futuristic skank, the Dubs began playing full live band shows and were soon on giant US tours. In the UK they got lumped under the big beat tag alongside the Chemical Brothers and Fatboy Slim maintaining a rock & roll attitude to their block-rockin beats.
Their debut Point Blank album led to remix work for Moby, Limp Bizkit, Crystal Method and Ian Brown, and they did a track for the Blade 2 soundtrack with Busta Rhymes. Touring extensively, the band effectively swerved around the big beat backlash in the UK and as the Millennium passed they had their second album Six Million Ways To Live ready to go. A more politicised affair, the problem was that parts of the album were scarily prophetic.
"It seemed like almost every track on there could refer to 9/11," says Jason. "The album was just about to come out, and everything just got cancelled," adds Barry. "We just came home and sat with our hands on our heads." On September 11th 2001 the world had changed in a day.
Eventually surfacing after the 9/11 furor had died down, Six Million Ways To Live was particularly notable for the single Problem Is featuring Terry Hall. Dubbed the best Specials ska single the Specials never wrote, the track led to the ex-Specials singer becoming an integral part of the band and playing a large part in this new 2007 album.
In recent years the Dub Pistols name has continued to circumnavigate the globe, thanks to a number of high-profile gigs with the full band, and various Soundsystem dates DJ + scratch DJ + MC or Barry DJing solo. The band compiled a Y4K beats and breaks album, and the pieces of the jigsaw fell into place for Speakers and Tweeters.
If youd told a 15-year-old Barry Ashworth that hed end up in the same band as his hero Terry Hall from The Specials, hed have laughed in your face. But with the distinctive front man now a regular vocal presence alongside UK hip-hop hero Rodney P and wicked young US rapper T.K. Lawrence the Pistols have cemented their line-up.
Speakers and Tweeters does a great job of referring back to a rich heritage of alternative underground music but then catapults it into the future. Check the roots-rockin skank of Running From The Thoughts, or the classic horns, echoes and rim-shots in their magnificent update of Rapture by Blondie. One of the earliest rap hits in the early 80s, Terry Hall really makes Debbie Harrys song his own with a sultry, almost comatose delivery.
You can see the dubwise Youll Never Find being rinsed at blues parties in Jamaica. You can see the Pistols swaggering in a bling-tastic video on MTV Base in their post-ironic cover of Peaches by punk legends The Stranglers. You can see Chuck D from Public Enemy digging the militant hip-hop of the Rodney P-rapped Something To Trust.
A particular live band favourite is Gangsters, the first seminal Specials single, with Terry Hall exclusively reprising this memorable 2-Tone classic for the album. The barnstorming live shows have won the Dubs plaudits from across the board from alt.rock dudes like Gogol Bordello and Perry Farrell (ex-Janes Addiction) to dance chaps such as Ed Chemical and Paul Daley (ex-Leftfield) and this album looks set to win them even more converts.
Faster than a speeding bullet Dub Pistols are set to blow.
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DEFEND RELEASES

Catalog Number:
DFN80036
Title:
Speakers and Tweeters
Release Date:
May 2008
Track List
01. Speed of Light
feat. Blade
02. Peaches feat. Terry Hall
(of The Specials)
03. Speakers and Tweeters
04. Running from the Thoughts
feat. Terry Hall
05. Rapture feat. Terry Hall
06. Cruise Control
07. Open
08. Youll Never Find
feat. Rodney P
09. Gangsters feat. Terry Hall
10. Something to Trust
11. Mach 10
12. Stronger
13. Gave you Time
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