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Show UB40 Feat. Ali Campbell Delamere Forest presales in more places
### Labour of Love among the pines with UB40 Feat. Ali Campbell
UB40 Feat. Ali Campbell carries the Birmingham reggae pop sound with Ali Campbell's warm tenor up front. #### From unemployment form to forest stage The big recent chapter is the split from UB40 and the loss of Astro in 2021, which reshaped the show and the salute moments. Expect a steady run of covers and originals that feel familiar, with likely anchors like Red Red Wine, Kingston Town, and Food for Thought. Can't Help Falling in Love could appear in a tender mid set spot as couples sway. #### What you might hear in the grove The crowd skews mixed in age, with loyal fans in retro tour shirts, younger reggae heads, and locals who know every horn riff. A neat tidbit, the band named itself after a UK benefits form and built the DEP studio to track horns and rhythm together for that easy blend. Another quirk is that the famous toast in Red Red Wine was added later for the US single, which is why it lands like a surprise live. Note: songs and staging mentioned here are informed guesses, not a guaranteed plan.
### Red wine and tall trees: the scene with UB40 Feat. Ali Campbell
The forest crowd tends to dress practical but colorful, with bucket hats, crisp polos, and vintage Labour of Love tees. #### Sing it back, soft then loud Early in the night you hear gentle humming between songs, and by the hits the voices rise in full choruses. The loudest call and response lands on the toast lines of Red Red Wine, where a whole field answers the MC in rhythm. #### Style cues and small rituals Some fans carry small red, gold, and green flags or scarves tucked on bags, a nod to reggae roots without fuss. Merch tables lean classic, with bold block logos, a "Feat. Ali Campbell" tee, and a poster in sunset tones. You may notice an easy moment of respect when the band nods to Astro, with a short cheer and a hand in the air. Between songs, stories of first gigs in the eighties float through the paths, and strangers trade favorite deep cuts.
### How UB40 Feat. Ali Campbell shapes the live sound
On stage, Ali Campbell sings a step lower than in the eighties, trading edge for warmth and steady pitch. #### Groove over glitter Guitars chop the offbeat clean while keys pad the low mids, so the horns have space to glide. The bass walks simple shapes that lock to a relaxed kick, keeping the groove wide and unhurried. You might hear Red Red Wine split into a pop pass and a dubby second half where an MC covers Astro's toast. #### Small choices, big feel A lesser known touch, the baritone sax often doubles the bass in choruses to make the low end bloom without extra volume. They like to push Food for Thought just a notch faster live, which gives the chorus more snap without losing weight. Lights lean warm amber and green with slow sweeps, more mood than spectacle, so ears stay on the rhythm.
### Kindred grooves for fans of UB40 Feat. Ali Campbell
Fans of The Wailers will feel at home with the easy skank and bass forward sway. #### Neighboring sounds on the road Jimmy Cliff shares the same singalong core and uplift, with a band that moves from roots to pop in clean steps. If you like UK ska edges and big choruses, Madness scratches that itch from a different angle. #### Why these names click For deeper UK roots reggae with political bite and rich horns, Steel Pulse lines up closely. Even the alternate UB40 lineup draws a similar crowd, sharing catalog threads and that midnight radio shine. The overlap comes from mellow tempos, story first vocals, and a live mix built for warmth rather than volume. If that balance hits your ear, this show sits right in your lane.