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DJ Fatboy Slim backs small venues with Brighton grassroots gig

BBC Published Jun 29, 2026 Reviewed Jul 2, 2026 ✓ Reviewed by citations.press editors
Citation-ready fact
DJ Fatboy Slim played a sold-out set at The Pipeline, a 60-capacity venue in Brighton, on Sunday.
60 capacity · The Pipeline venue
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Citation-ready fact
MVP has acquired nine grassroots venues since 2022 and raised about £7m through crowdfunding and fundraising for projects.
9 venues · grassroots venues acquired by MVPabout 7000000 GBP · funds raised by MVP
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The Everywhere At Once festival saw more than 2,000 artists play at about 400 grassroots venues across the UK.
more than 2000 artists · Everywhere At Once festival participantsabout 400 venues · grassroots venues
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Fatboy Slim has performed at one of Brighton's smallest venues in a show of support for the grassroots music scene.

The DJ, whose real name is Norman Cook, played a sold-out set at The Pipeline, a 60-capacity venue in the city, on Sunday, marking the final night of the Everywhere At Once festival.

The "rock bar" is set to be bought by Music Venue Properties (MVP), which aims to preserve grassroots spaces as community venues through "cultural leases" with affordable rents.

Speaking before the show, Cook said he felt strongly about supporting smaller venues, describing them as spaces where careers begin, and said he wanted to "give something back".

The debut Everywhere At Once festival saw more than 2,000 artists play at about 400 grassroots venues across the UK.

Fatboy Slim's support act was Jacobi Knight, his daughter Nelly's boyfriend, while his son, Woody Cook, supported hip hop duo Rizzle Kicks at Patterns on Brighton seafront.

Cook said there were several DJs in his family who wanted to see small venues preserved, adding: "We all feel the same."

The event, which was held on what would have been Glastonbury weekend, aimed to highlight the importance of live music beyond major festivals and cities, reminding people it can be found "on your doorstep".

Glastonbury Festival is taking a break in 2026 as part of a "fallow year", to allow the farmland to recover and the environment to regenerate.

Chief executive of the charity Music Venue Trust, Mark Davyd, said grassroots spaces were "absolutely essential".

The Pipeline's owner, Thomas Evrenos, said the festival was a "great idea".

He said: "We usually compete with Glastonbury, and a lot of people, bands, are going away during this weekend, and suddenly we have a really good festival for everyone."

He said if the MVP purchase went ahead it would secure the venue's future, adding: "I think for the community in Brighton as a whole, if it's a designated earmarked live music venue, I think that would be fantastic."

MVP, which was created by the trust, has acquired nine grassroots venues since 2022 and raised about £7m through crowdfunding and fundraising for projects.

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