Manchester Venues 18 to 22

Following on from the Festival blog last week I am going to concentrate on some Dot to Dot festival venues on and around Oldham Street in the Northern Quarter that I visited at the event which took place on 28/05/16.  

COW is a two-floor vintage clothes shop on the same block of Piccadilly Records and is an archetypal shop for this area of town. From a very unusual vantage point of standing behind a clothes rack we witnessed a young Manchester acoustic artist called Miranda Amess who had a decent voice with a smidgeon of a KT Tunstall vibe about her.  It was also my 250th different venue.

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Cow clothes shop. Image Credit WordPress.com

The Black Dog Ballroom is a downstairs New York style bar situated underneath Affleck’s Palace on the corner of Tib and Church Street. I had only previously been in for a drink and a burger once before prior to another gig. The venue was behind a further door off the main room and had a little bar and stage within. We saw Love for Zero, an electro synth band from Manchester who were in the Editors mould.  

Traversing from the basement to the top floor of Affleck’s you find the Black Milk Dessert Café. The local band on stage were Bright Young People and they had a nice scuzzy Stooges crunch about them. Their debut single was produced by Ian McCulloch of Echo and the Bunnymen.  

Their performance exemplified the uniqueness of the chosen venue as the American style diner on the third floor with windows overlooking Oldham Street was in great contrast to the sturdy guitar led sound on stage.

The unassuming orange signed Koffee Pot is located at the Swan Street end of Oldham Street. It is very near the Crown and Kettle pub which unfortunately ever appeared only on a festival roster for one day when I couldn’t attend as I was ensconced at Uncle George’s 60th hootenanny, and as a result my friends Jez Catlow and Moggy have beaten me to the punch there.

We saw a three-piece garage rock band called the Slovaks and they were good value.

The Koffee Pot. Image Credit northernnoise.co.uk

I recently read that the Koffee Pot was collaborating with the reborn Deaf Institute by providing the food for the ground floor restaurant space.    

Just off Oldham St lies the 57 Thomas Street Beer House. It is one of several pubs linked to the local Marble Brewery who also have their original flagship Marble Arch pub nearby. They had some devilishly strong ales on display in the ground floor bar and the venue was situated upstairs.

The band Psyblings were a terrific five-piece psych rock combo from Warrington who had met at Manchester University. Unfortunately, we only had time for a couple of tracks, but I made a mental note of their capability and as a result ensured we caught their full set at another event the following year.  

I caught another local band called Easter at the venue later that year.  

The bar has very recently been taken over by Fierce Beer, an award-winning craft beer brewery based in Aberdeen, enabling them to open their first bar North of the border.

Festival Types

I am not altogether sure the reasons why, but I was late to the plate in discovering festivals and only attended my first one as a day ticket to Reading Festival in 1995 at the tender age of 27. I also missed the years when you could feasibly obtain tickets for Glastonbury before tickets became unattainable and as a result, I have never graced Worthy Farm with a visit.  

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Glastonbury Festival. Image Credit Metro

In the spirit of full disclosure, I must admit shamefully I have never camped at festivals and have always stayed off site which is maybe not fully embracing the whole experience but is hugely beneficial if inclement weather strikes, which at certain sites it has regularly obliged in that regard.

Though singular ‘normal’ gigs are fun there is something enticing about outdoor festivals where you have a tsunami of bands available to you, the main stage being in the open air. They also can be hugely advantageous to discover exciting new bands and due to the short sets, the bands do not overplay their welcome. If you lose interest, you can easily wander off to either have a drink or a doughnut or seek solace in another tent or on rare occasions a cheeky bit of sunbathing!

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Festival Donut Stand. Image Credit design lovefest.

At the many festivals I have attended there have always been a variety of options, including circuses, reggae, dance, northern soul, funfairs, cinemas, a plethora of food outlets and sometimes thankfully real ale. A pair of comfy shoes is a requisite requirement.

In the last 10-15 years there has been an increase in what I would quantify as an ‘urban festival’.  These are primarily located in city centres and involve a suite of venues generally within feasible walking distance of each other. You obtain a wristband from the source venue and off you go.

Some of the events in this sphere I have attended are Live at Leeds, Hockley Hustle in Nottingham, Sounds from the Other City in Salford and Dot to Dot, Carefully Planned Festival and Off the Record in Manchester. They mingle the established venues with more innovative ones such as clothes shops and cafes.

My gig OCD can rear its head when attending these shindigs as I am always endeavouring to attend every venue on the roster and as a result, the friends who accompany me are hugely tolerant of my foibles.  

I always scour the listings as soon as they are published to identify new venues and ensure they are visited on the evening. These events can present conundrums in set time slippage and where to imbibe the odd beer or two en route. Are you fortunate to arrive at the start of the set where the band are worth staying for or do you land halfway through the last track? My overriding imperative is to catch as much music as I can on the day.

Some events can have widely dispersed venues which may involve a 20-30 minute walk from outermost venue to outermost event so even comfier shoes are required but if you are willing to put the mileage in you can cover up to 20 venues in a day!