EQ50: The Collective Rebalancing Drum & Bass
Origins & Mission
EQ50 was founded in 2018 by a collective including DJ Flight, Mantra, Sweetpea, MC Chickaboo, Jenna G and Alley Cat, among others.
Their core aim: create fairer representation in drum & bass. That means raising up womxn, non-binary and gender-diverse producers and DJs, offering platforms, mentorship, visibility and structural change.
What EQ50 Actually Does
Here are some of their key programmes and initiatives:
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Mentorship Programme – EQ50 runs a 12-month mentorship for womxn/non-binary producers, giving them access to label networks, production and DJ workshops, A&R advice, and club/industry support.
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Events & Stage Takeovers – They curate line-ups, stage takeovers (such as at the Outlook Festival), and club nights that highlight under-represented talent.
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Advocacy & Visibility – Through feature articles, podcasts, mixes, they highlight structural inequality in drum & bass and push for culture change.
Why It Matters
Drum & bass, like many music genres, has had issues with representation: gender imbalance, lack of visibility for LGBTQ+ artists, fewer opportunities beyond the male-dominated core. EQ50 is addressing real structural issues: access, mentoring, support and visibility.
By doing this, they’re not just adding marginalised voices—they’re shifting the sound, the culture and the future of D&B.
Key Success Stories
Thanks to EQ50’s programmes, several rising artists have emerged:
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Nia Archives – Previously a mentee via EQ50.
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Mandidextrous – Another success story from the mentorship.
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Spectral – Benefitted from the scheme and now signed to shows/labels.
These demonstrate the real impact—talent is being developed, given platform, then making waves.
The Sound & Style
While EQ50 is more about culture than a specific “sound”, their curatorial signature includes:
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Genres across the D&B spectrum—jungle, liquid, dancefloor rollers.
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Emphasis on fresh, emerging voices, often outside the mainstream circuit.
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Inclusive line-ups that broaden what listeners expect from D&B.
What’s Next for EQ50
According to their public info:
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The 2024 mentorship class has been announced, with partnerships across labels like Critical Music, The North Quarter and more.
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They’ve received funding (e.g., Orbit Fund) to create a documentary about Black womxn in jungle & D&B.
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Continued focus on not just short-term events, but building infrastructure so that under-represented talent thrives long-term.
EQ50 is both a symbol and a movement. They show that creating space for marginalised talent isn’t optional—it’s vital for the genre to evolve. If you’re a DJ, producer, or simply a fan of drum & bass, supporting platforms like EQ50 means supporting diversity, better culture, and better music.
Want to explore their work? Check out the EQ50 SoundCloud and mentorship pages. (soundcloud.com)




