Find more presales for shows in Southampton, GB
Show The Beat presales in more places
Beat Roots: Two-Tone Liftoff with The Beat
Born in late 1970s Birmingham, the band fused punk urgency, Jamaican ska rhythms, and bright pop choruses into quick, dance-ready songs.
From Two-Tone to Today
The big context now is change: after vocalist-toaster Ranking Roger passed in 2019, various live lineups have kept the catalog moving while honoring that call-and-response energy. Expect a front-loaded set that leans on Mirror in the Bathroom, Hands Off...She's Mine, Save It for Later, and Ranking Full Stop, with a couple of deep cuts for lifers.Crowd in Black-and-White Motion
Crowds tend to be multi-gen, with first-wave ska devotees alongside newer punk-ska fans, all quick on the offbeat and light on their feet. Lesser-known note: Save It for Later uses an odd DADAAD guitar tuning that gives those chiming chords their suspended lift. Another deep-cut fact: sax great Saxa learned his craft with Jamaican legends, which is why the horn lines glide so naturally. For clarity, the songs and production touches mentioned here are educated guesses rather than guarantees.Black-and-White Scene, Warm Hearts
You see checkerboard accents, neat polos, and well-loved boots mixed with fresh streetwear, a blend that nods to two-tone without feeling like costume.
Checkers, Creases, and Good Vibes
People dance in tight, friendly pockets, trading the classic two-step skank and quick heel pivots when the sax kicks in. Merch runs heavy on the Go-Feet aesthetic, with bold type, black-and-white blocks, and throwback single art on tees and posters.Shared Rituals
Call-and-response moments pop up on choruses where the harmonies stack, and claps land on the offbeat like a reflex. Fans swap stories about early 80s club gigs right next to kids discovering the catalog from skate videos. It feels like a scene that treats history as fuel, not a museum, and the dance floor is where that idea stays alive.Offbeat Engine, Hook-First Design
Vocals tend to split between tuneful leads and brisk toasting, which keeps verses nimble and choruses big.
Rhythm That Pops
Guitar chops the offbeat clean while bass walks simple, rubbery lines that make the kick drum feel springy. Drums favor a crisp rim click and tight hi-hat to leave space for sax phrases to answer the vocal. Keys or second guitar often double the skank to thicken the grid without clutter.Subtle Tweaks, Big Payoff
Live, tempos inch up a notch so songs pop without losing shape, and you may hear a bright key change to lift a final chorus. A fun insider move: they sometimes tag the coda of Ranking Full Stop onto Mirror in the Bathroom for a breathless segue. Visuals usually stay high-contrast and bold, letting the rhythm section do the talking while lights snap on snare hits.Kindred Riddims, Shared Dancefloors
Fans of Madness usually click with this show because both acts turn ska rhythms into big, singable pop hooks you can dance to.