Some festivals chase trends. Others create them. In the ever-shifting landscape of British music, Dot To Dot has spent two decades doing both while somehow making it look effortless. Like the best indie record shops or that one friend who’s always ahead of the curve, this roving celebration of emerging talent has an almost supernatural ability to spot what’s next before everyone else catches up.
Twenty years in, what started as a plucky Nottingham experiment has evolved into something approaching an institution – though one that steadfastly refuses to act its age. While other festivals have come and gone, expanded and contracted, or drifted into comfortable mediocrity, Dot To Dot maintains the restless energy of a debut EP, perpetually discovering tomorrow’s headliners while they’re still playing afternoon slots.
It’s a delicate balance, this business of staying relevant while growing up. But then, Dot To Dot has always thrived in the spaces between – between cities and scenes, between discovery and tradition, between the massive names it’s helped break and the countless others whose biggest shows might have been on its stages. As the festival marks its twentieth anniversary, that spirit of perpetual discovery feels more vital than ever.
Born in Nottingham as a plucky experiment in bringing emerging talent to the Midlands, Dot To Dot began with a simple but ambitious vision. As festival director Anton Lockwood recalls of those early days: “I guess cooking up the original idea of a SXSW or Camden Crawl in Nottingham, but aimed at fans, not industry.” That fan-first philosophy would prove prescient, setting the stage for two decades of musical discovery.
The festival’s inaugural edition sprawled across three intimate Nottingham venues – Rescue Rooms, The Social (now known as The Bodega), and Stealth. Lockwood’s memory of that first outing captures both the uncertainty and excitement: “We were making it up as we went along, but the first one happened, The Rakes rocked it, people showed up! We were on the road.”
That road would soon lead beyond Nottingham’s city limits. By 2007, the festival had expanded to Bristol, marking the beginning of its evolution into a multi-city phenomenon. The same year delivered one of the festival’s most explosive moments, as Lockwood recalls: “Frank Carter (then in Gallows, now in the Sex Pistols) quite literally tearing the roof off the motherfucker in Rock City’s basement was genuinely breathtaking!”
This particular memory resonates across the years, with booker Ben Ryles sharing his own version: “Dot To Dot is such a big part of what we do, and it’s been loads of fun being involved in almost every one. There have been so many amazing memories over the years, but one that stands out is Gallows at Rock City Basement (now BETA). Frank literally tore the fabric ceiling down during an incendiary set.”
The festival’s expansion continued into Manchester in 2010, establishing the multi-city format that would become its signature. This growth coincided with an uncanny ability to catch artists just before their breakthrough moments. Perhaps none illustrates this better than Lockwood’s recollection from 2017: “A couple of weeks before the festival, I had an email from an artist manager I knew a bit, sending me a tune from a new artist. I listened to the song and instantly booked the artist for the festival. Come the event, in a bar in Bristol, a ginger-haired, slightly shambling Scotsman wandered on stage and blew the minds of all 30 of us who were there. Lewis Capaldi had arrived at Dot to Dot!”
The festival’s commitment to emerging talent has led to numerous such moments, from early appearances by Florence + The Machine and The 1975 to a pre-fame Dua Lipa in 2016. Yet it’s not just about spotting future stars – it’s about creating an environment where music discovery feels natural and exciting.
For those working behind the scenes, the festival creates its own kind of magic. Maddy Chamberlain, City Co-ordinator, describes the unique experience of straddling both sides of the stage: “My favourite memory from D2D has to be the madness of event managing the festival and playing The Fleece in Bristol for Dot To Dot 2023 (as part of Midnight Rodeo) – what a whirlwind hour that was! Running over there, taking my radio off and jumping on stage to a packed-out Fleece, which was unbelievably lovely. We had so much fun on stage, then stuck around for Opus Kink afterwards, which blew my mind. All before getting back to work!”
The festival’s history isn’t without its more curious moments. Lockwood shares a particularly memorable incident from 2014: “Not sure it’s a ‘good’ memory as such, but we had Macaulay Culkin’s pizza-themed Velvet Underground-based band, The Pizza Underground played all three cities, the Nottingham crowd didn’t overly take to them, and they withdrew from the ensuing hail of plastic glasses. Not impressed that the D2D audience would do that (just go see something else, FFS), but the moment the next morning when I realised Dot to Dot was global headline news was just nuts!”
Such moments of notoriety aside, it’s the intimate, unexpected performances that often leave the most lasting impressions. Alex Black, General Manager of Bristol’s Thekla, remembers: “My favourite memory of Dot To Dot is Single Mothers closing the Thekla stage at 2am in 2015. D2D is a long day for all involved behind the scenes, and I think I was on about hour 18 of my shift, but things were winding down, so I went to watch the show from the balcony. The energy that these guys brought to the stage woke up the whole room and the crowd kept it going until the final note. It was a fun, rambunctious set and a fantastic way to end a great event.”
The festival’s ability to create these moments of serendipitous discovery remains one of its greatest strengths. Head of Marketing Anwyn Williams shares her own conversion experience: “Dot To Dot 2015 and celebrating the 10th birthday always stands out to me, partly because it was my first time working at the event, having joined DHP in summer 2014. But it was seeing The Hotelier in all three cities that I’ll never forget. The first leg in Manchester was the first time I’d heard them. I was drawn back to it in Thekla on day 2, and finally, back in Nottingham with all my friends, I rounded out the weekend watching them in Bodega – now a fully fledged fan. I’d gone down a rabbit hole of being into folkier sounds at the time, so I’d partly credit those three sets with reawakening my love of heavier stuff.”
Sometimes, these moments of discovery come with an extra dash of chaos, as Head of Promo Patrick Somers recounts: “Back in 2011, I booked IDLES to play the opening slot at the Anson Rooms in Bristol, which went down great. Later that day, a band dropped out of a late slot at Thekla, and I called Joe to see if they wanted to play again. They ended up leaving the pub, getting their gear back out of the studio and loaded onto the boat, proceeding to play a rowdy and possibly intoxicated and intoxicating set to a packed venue, with their guitarist turning up halfway through as he wanted to watch the Champions League final.”
As Dot To Dot approaches its twentieth anniversary, Lockwood reflects on its enduring impact: “I’m immensely proud that the little event we cooked up to get some cool artists to Nottingham is still going, and indeed more vibrant than ever, having helped bring exciting new music to thousands and thousands of people across the 20 years!”
Dot To Dot will take place in Bristol and Nottingham from 24th-25th May.
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