West Lothian Courier

Club set to mark its 50th birthday

- LIAM SMILLIE

Bathgate has long held its reputation as the music capital of West Lothian, and that is due in no small part to the Scottish music institutio­n that is Dreadnough­tRock.

For generation­s, music fans across Scotland flocked to Bathgate to see what all the fuss was about.

The club has a legacy to uphold - some DJs have performed in Dreadnough­tRock for over 40 years, with the newest DJ having a tenure of just four years, and certain bar staff have worked in the building for decades.

The team behind Dreadnough­t don’t remember exactly when the venue first opened, but after looking through accounts and listening to the oral histories of long-time customers and friends, they narrowed down the time of opening to around April / May in 1972 - give or take a month or so.

Studio 4 started what would become Dreadnough­tRock in 1972, a rock disco at the Old Dreadnough­t Hotel, which was then taken over by Douglas Croft around three years in, who remains at the helm 47 years later - ready to celebrate the club’s golden anniversar­y.

Alan Russell, the operations manager of Dreadnough­tRock spoke about being open in Bathgate for 50 years.

He said: “It’s fairly unique for any company to be open 50 years, never mind in our line of work. I’ve been involved with Dreadnough­t for over 25 years now, and I’ve seen the scene change

massively in West Lothian. Back then there were at least eight nightclubs in Bathgate and around 15 to 20 in West Lothian - now I think West Lothian only has three altogether. That just shows how phenomenal it is to be open this long - and I think what makes us have that staying power is that we evolved.”

Ten years ago the club’s 40th anniversar­y night sold a total of 100 tickets on a Sunday night, which quickly escalated into a chaotic party with many more looking for invites as word spread.

Following on from their 40th anniversar­y celebratio­ns in 2012, the management are keen to do it right,

expanding things into four nights of celebratio­n so no one from the clubs history gets left behind.

The four nights will allow for all the exstaff and customers of Dreadnough­t to come back and relive their glory days from the club’s half a century’s worth of history.

The club got its name from the Old Dreadnough­t Hotel, the original venue in which Douglas Croft hosted a Rock Disco in 1972. The Old Dreadnough­t Hotel closed around 2006 when Swallow Hotels, the owner of the hotel, went into administra­tion.

Despite the loss of their spiritual home, The Dreadnough­t persisted, eventually

settling at its new venue on King Street in Bathgate where it’s been for nearly 15 years.

Alan concludes: “While nothing’s changed dramatical­ly, we’ve evolved with rock music and all the different things that came and went.

“We’ve been rocking through some torturous times, of course covid has hit us hard, but even looking back at the smoking ban and the hike in interest rates, those both caused mayhem. Our spending power has come and gone but we’ll always be around - it’s to the point now where we don’t measure in years, we measure in decades.”

 ?? ?? Planning celebratio­ns Manager of Dreadnough­tRock, Alan Russell, is looking forward to the 50th anniversar­y
Planning celebratio­ns Manager of Dreadnough­tRock, Alan Russell, is looking forward to the 50th anniversar­y

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