Manchester Venues 217 to 218

Canal Street is now universally known as the centre point of Manchester’s Gay Village. It is located nearby to Piccadilly train station and lies opposite the new Kampus suburb. It is quite astounding how often these new areas spring up in Manchester, where I often have to peruse the map when I read about the latest one to identify where it is positioned geographically. 

Canal Street first appeared when linked to the construction of the adjacent Rochdale Canal which was initially built in 1804. This naturally resulted in various pubs and businesses being built in that area. As canal trade waned in the 1950’s (post Peaky Blinders) the area morphed into a cotton factory enclave and by night was a red light district.

Canal Street. Image Credit Manchester Evening News

As the cotton era ended it became a dark decaying area and was used for furtive meetings between gay geezers. In the unforgiving 1980’s decade the Greater Manchester Chief Constable James Anderton accused homosexuals of ‘swirling in the cesspit of their own making’, sounds like a lovely open minded chap!

That statement mirrored the abhorrent rhetoric that was being peddled out at that stage by the then prime minister Margaret Thatcher. She also introduced Section 28 in 1988 which effectively banned homosexuality and this was only repealed in 2003 after a long campaign.    

This also coincided with the shameful death sentence years of early AIDS, lovingly portrayed in Russell T Davies ‘It’s a Sin’ TV series, which even though set in London, was partially filmed in Manchester.

In 1990 the first bar opened called Manto which took over an old garage repair building, and they made the exceptionally brave move to not hide away behind unmarked doors and installed sizeable plate glass windows. It was a statement of intent but perhaps understandably did not prevent it from making a loss for the first six months as people were fearful of entering across the threshold. After those initial difficulties it began to thrive and remained there until its closure in 2013.  

Manto. Image Credit Historic England.

Another event contributing to this gradual sea change of acceptance was the endorsement of the forward thinking council who were the first to support civil partnerships and supported many non-discrimination sexuality policies.

Many bars opened there in the intervening years, and it eventually became the most successful gay village in Europe. The location featured heavily in the 1999 ‘Queer as Folk’ and the very recent ‘Tip Toe’ TV series.    

As the popularity increased it became more of a ‘go to’ destination for stag and hen outings and this introduced for a time the ‘gayness’ test. Uncle George one night fell foul of this criteria as I was allowed access, but he was denied entry as he was classed as ‘not gay enough’. I have obviously never mentioned this to him since!

On the musical front, the germination of what later became the Manchester Pride Festival commenced in 1985 with a grant of £1700 from Manchester City Council to sponsor the first event. In 2003 the Gay Village became the established location for what was by that stage a ten-day gathering.

I have never yet attended the festival but anecdotally I have heard from my festival mole Lottie that it has been marred over the last couple of years by been guilty of overselling and valid ticket holders have not even been able to access the event. Previous performers include Ariana Grande, Dannii Minogue, Rita Ora, Jake Shears, Sophie Ellis Bextor and Sugababes.

The street used to be a regular jaunt for a late drink in the 1990’s when we were creatively killing time prior to the 1.24am ghost train back to Preston after numerous gigs and the obligatory visit to Chinatown. In the last year Riggers and I have travelled over for the odd Friday night match to watch PNE and I have had a 30 minute gap at Piccadilly station before my last train home.

So, in October 2025 I decided to use that time productively and had a skelp down and wandered into Manchester The Church and there was a local act called the Alter Girls performing. The venue is owned by husband and husband team John and Antonia Hamilton who previously launched Poptastic in 1996 and also currently own Bar Pop, which is another thriving joint on the street.  

The Church Bar. Image Credit gaymapper.com

I repeated the trick in March 2026 this time venturing into Manchester Via Bar where I saw an artist called Kayleigh playing. The Via has been open since 1995 and is known locally as the ‘grande dame’ of the street. Their website informs me that they will be an active participant in the 2026 pride event with performances there including Claire Richards from Steps, Una Healy from The Saturdays, Adam Rickitt from Coronation Street and Katie Price from Brighton!

Gigs from Abroad Part 28 – Luxembourg

In March 2025 we headed off on the lad’s trip version XVII with the chosen destination this time being Luxembourg. It is the seventh smallest country in Europe, measuring only 50 miles at its longest point (population approx. 700k) but is a rich and reasonably influential country with its own Luxembougish (Germanic) language and the Court of Justice of the European Union being located there.

It has had several rulers after initially being established in the 11th century before gaining ongoing independence from 1867. We lodged in the historical capital Luxembourg city which was declared a UNESCO World heritage site status in 1994. In 2020, they set an unusual precedent of becoming the first country in the world to provide free public transport nationally, a generous and welcome scenario that we took full advantage of!  

Luxembourg city. Image Credit statrip.blogspot.com

The city has the accolade of being the only place to be named European Capital of Culture twice and they have won the Eurovision Song Contest five times. They also have the second highest total of Michelin-starred restaurants per capita, behind Japan.

Famous residents include the EC President Jean-Claude Juncker, champion skier Marc Girardelli and the cycling Schleck brothers. Also of Luxembourg descent was the Academy Award winning actress Loretta Young.

Additionally, there was Radio Luxembourg which was one of the very earliest commercial stations which ran from 1933 to 1992, and like many of my generation I used to listen to the scratchy long wave 208 frequency broadcast, under the covers late at night on my transistor radio!  Long wave was subsequently used by Atlantic 252 and RTE Radio 1 before the mast was finally demolished in July 2023.   

Radio Luxembourg flyer. Image Credit nostalgiacentral.com

We landed on the Friday and jumped on the free bus to commute to our hotel which was positioned above street level and only accessible via a lift. That evening we headed into the city on a bar crawl and grabbed some tea in the old town.

Luxembourg is landlocked and bordered by three separate countries and the one we chose not to visit on this trip was Belgium. On the Saturday morning, we mulched down to the main train station and as we were undertaking a border crossing there were some lengthy shenanigans when purchasing our tickets.  

Our destination was the Northeastern French city of Metz, nicknamed the green city due to a plethora of open areas and public gardens. The gothic Saint Stephen Cathedral was a spectacular sight and the finest house of worship I have encountered thus far, even Jason was enthralled by it! It apparently contains the largest expanse of stained glass windows in the world.

We found a lively square in the sunshine where we ensconced for a couple of hours and witnessed a large protest traversing by whilst munching on our pizzas. We then encountered a stroppy bar owner which encouraged us to return to our base camp.

In advance of our trip we had scoured for any gigs thereby discovering Skunk Anansie were playing in the city but unfortunately, we then discovered it was already completely sold out. As an alternate we headed to a local bar to watch Luxembourg unexpectedly defeat Sweden 1-0 in a friendly international football match. Afterwards, we played some woeful darts as Luke Littler we were not!

Nearby in the Gare area we visited Luxembourg Crossfire Nordic Bar, which was a homely little sports bar with craft beers and has a loft for hire for private parties. Whilst in residence there was a local act called Blue-ish performing. Next door to there was a strange establishment that our general consensus after departing was that it was potentially a ‘knocking shop’!

The Crossfire Bar. Image Credit tripadvisor.com

After a group breakfast on Sunday, we headed out to the bonny city of Trier, which is the oldest German city after being founded by the Romans back in the 1st century BC. General Charles de Gaulle was stationed in the city during the French occupation of Rhineland, and the philosopher Karl Marx was born there in 1918 when it was under Prussian rule.  

We visited the hugely impressive Porta Nigra (Latin for black gate), a large Roman city gate built in the 2nd century AD. In the centre we found a busy civilised Kolsch beer bar before Schnitzel munchies kicked in and a local restaurant was visited.   

Later in the evening we returned to Luxembourg and jumped on a bus to head to a couple of bars in the lower area of the old town. Thus, at closing time we were potentially stranded at the bottom of a steep hill which was our route home, this presented difficulties to some members of our group who either had mobility issues or were plain idle!  

A taxi seemed an absurd approach considering the free transport, but the last bus had already departed. We asked in the bar and in a throwaway final comment the bar maid said, ‘you could always go up in the lift’, which was music to our ears. Directions led us into a tunnel and there was indeed an elevator complete with adjoining lavatories, it would appear the Luxembourgers think of every scenario!