Nottingham Venues 46 to 48

Nearby the Lace Market tram stop at Unit 6 on Warser Street you will found the Lofthouse. The arts space venue is located on the third floor of an industrial unit and they sporadically had gigs and I visited there just the once on 24/10/15.

It was a late gig, so we decided to future proof our entrance by visiting earlier and purchasing tickets but unfortunately the chap did not have a hand stamp available at that point. This nearly burned us later after we returned to the venue after watching the Hooton Tennis Club at the Chameleon, as we had to persuade a different chap on duty that we were honourable gig goers with a valid right of entrance and not a couple of blaggards!

The band in question was a local band called Sunset Nebula. They hit the stage about 11pm and I would place them in the ethereal spacy post-rock bracket (if such a genre exists!), they were excellent and greatly assisted by a terrific sound system which created a crisp as a bell acoustics.

On 14/05/16, the night before my brothers 50th birthday party we somewhat unsurprisingly decided to head out and watch a couple of bands. There was a venue I had been targeting for a while called JT Soar out near Sneinton marketplace. It was previously an ex-fruit and veg warehouse that has been converted into a DIY music and arts space containing a recording studio and rehearsal space frequented in the main by local bands.

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Nottingham JT Soar venue. Image Credit leftlion.co.uk

After visiting a couple of grubby, not grungey nearby hostelries we sallied over to the venue. On first impression it resembled a squat with a battered doorway and settee to the right and a very small stage but in truth it had an undeniable charm. It looked like it had regular punters who frequented each week and you probably couldn’t exceed 100 people in the venue. It was a friendly vibrant place and a perfect example of one of those grassroots venues that absolutely need to survive.

We were notified at the door that it was BYOB, so we skelped off to a local off licence and purchased some Tyskie Polish lager before re-entering. The support band was Throwing Stuff, a hardcore group originally from Manchester in the mould of Black Flag and Minor Threat. They were somewhat erratic but frenetically enjoyable.

The headliners were the Bennies, a lively ska punk band from Melbourne, Australia. They formed in 2009 under the original name of Madonna before predictably encountering legal issues and changing to their current name a couple of years later.

In 2001, we heard about a small, short-lived event called the Treefest Festival which was held at Newstead Common on the outskirts of Nottingham. So, on a sunny Saturday afternoon in July, we decided to drive out take a gander. It was a very low budget affair and we saw two artists, Naomi Hillman and Ana Gracey, a singer/songwriter from London.

The most interesting amusing moment occurred when we were sat on the grass in the sunshine surrounded by young families. The background DJ music was of a decent level, and I think it was a Faith No More track playing, when suddenly the lead singer screamed out ‘MuthaF%#*@r’, the look on some of the kids’ faces was a picture!

That scenario recalled to me an incident at the local Asda in the Sherwood area in Preston when a freshly sacked employee decided to depart in style. He commandeered the tannoy system and proceeded to turn up the volume and play at high volume the non-radio potty mouthed version of Rage Against the Machine’s ‘Killing in the Name Of’. I wish I had been undertaking my weekly shop at that point as I would have flown around with Zack de La Rocha’s strident vocals ringing in my ears!  

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Rage Against the Machine. Image Credit getwallpapers.com

So, this completes my Nottingham story incorporating a grand total of 71 gigs across 48 different venues!     

Lancaster Venue 2 – The Sugarhouse

Following our relocation from Preston to Manchester the place I miss visiting the most locally is Lancaster. It lies 20 miles north of Preston and it has a refreshing olde world feel to it with the obligatory castle on the hill.

The train station sits squarely on the West Coast main line so a Virgin, or now an Avanti express can complete that journey in under 15 minutes. Even if the last train was cancelled and morphed into a bus, we regularly managed to sweet talk the coach driver into dropping us off prior to Preston town centre as the route took us within 200 yards of our house at Withytrees.

We lived nearby the commencement of the Lancaster canal so a group of us in 2005 once cycled all the way through to Lancaster and due to the winding route of the waterway the trip was extended by an additional 10 miles.  

Once we arrived, we ensconced ourselves in the Merchants pub near the station and were instantly distracted by the first 50 over cricket match of the legendary Ashes summer which was on TV, so we muttered the immortal words ‘should we just watch the end of this….’. Three hours later two hazy looking cyclists were weaving their way home through the quietest possible Preston back streets! 

That epic cycle ride was on the same day as the Live 8 concert so with a large TV dinner I immersed myself into the concert though what I caught was poor fare and the standout act for me was the old troopers Roxy Music.

There is a plethora of fine hostelries In Lancaster including some on the canal and also a couple facing the River Lune. Another one of note is the Sun Inn which is the home of the Lancaster Brewery where they serve a scope of beers, namely Blonde, Red, Amber, Black and IPA, always a tricky choice! There is also a terrific gastro food pub called the Borough on Dalton Square and a small Chinese restaurant called Fortune Star near there where we have finished a few evenings before booking a taxi home.

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The Borough pub on Dalton Square. Image Credit dineclub.co.uk

Lancaster is the home of the legendary Lovely Eggs and they are fiercely proud of their town and play home gigs as and when they can. They have recorded a lot of their material at Lancaster Music Co-Op and have been recently fighting against its potential closure.

There is now a reasonably established festival called the Highest Point festival held in in May each year on the 54-acre Williamson Park on the far side of town, though I have not visited yet. They attract a reasonable line up with Richard Ashcroft announced already as a headliner for the 2022 version.

Now the more observant of you will recall my first ever gig being Slade at Lancaster University in 1983, so what was my second Lancaster venue I hear you ask, well that would be 20 years later in the Sugarhouse. The venue is situated on the site of the original sugar house in Lancaster founded in 1861, on Sugarhouse Alley near the Borough pub. The name is currently subject to review as it has a clear connotation with the slave trade.

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Lancaster Sugarhouse. Image Credit Flickr.

The building was originally leased to Lancaster University Students union by Mitchells Brewery in 1982 and has been a nightclub for nigh on 40 years where they have regular club nights and sporadic gigs. I recall the gig was a challenge to organise due to ticket issues and people pulling out and it is also clashed with a potential Snow Patrol gig at Preston Mill.

The band we saw was the Thrills from Dublin. I had picked up on them via their platinum debut album “So Much for the City” and their atmospheric single “One Horse Town”. The album had a sunny Sixties Californian vibe, obviously influenced by the bands 4-month sabbatical to San Diego just prior to the recording.

They had some good moments with three of four standout tracks, but the sound was a tad low, admittedly a common grouse of mine! My overriding memory was of their exceptionally tall guitarist who seemed to have a predilection for a very low set microphone resulting in regular crouching when providing backing vocals.