Pre Wickerman Festival

Beyond trips in my youth to places such as Edinburgh and Butlins in Ayr, my first trip to Scotland as an adult was an invite by the Dewhurst clan for the 1998 Hogmanay. The destination of choice was Kirkcudbright in South West Scotland, about a 3-hour drive from Preston. This started a regular chain of New Year visits over the next 10 years apart from one year out to attend a truly woeful party on Millennium Eve in Preston.

The digs on that first visit were out at Brighouse Bay which had a fine golf course and a terrific coastal walk where on a sunny day you could conceivably be facing the sea in the Mediterranean. I remember Tony Dewhurst who has some pyrotechnic tendencies setting off a firework one dark night called Big Ben which created a cacophonous sound and lit up the entirety of Kirkcudbright Bay.

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Brighouse Bay with a tee shot over the cliffs to the far left of the picture. Image Credit brighousebayholidaypark.co.uk.

For two of those years we stayed in a couple of large cottages overlooking the sea in Kippford. The location was a couple of miles down the road from Dalbeattie which had a good batch of bars and a decent Chinese restaurant called the Sea Horse (colloquially renamed by us as the Sea Devil!). On New Year’s Day the pubs were packed, and it became a tradition whilst on a pub crawl to watch the World Championship Darts that take place at that time of year.

I remember John and Tony telling the tale of a couple of years earlier watching local amateur side Dalbeattie Star playing in the Scottish FA Cup on literally an open pitch in the town. Later that evening they were stood next to the players in the Crown pub who were watching themselves on the highlights of the game on Sportscene!

A regular stop when we were travelling up was to a chippy in Annan where we devoured local Fish, Chips, Mushy Peas, Bread and Butter and a Pot of Tea or very occasionally Irn Bru (made from Girders!). There were some brutally cold winters up there with a couple of unnerving drives home and once getting the car stuck in the snow in a layby!

One New Year we ended up in a restaurant in Castle Douglas partaking in a 7-course meal finished off with the lead weight of local dessert Ecclefechan Tart. The Scottish dancing afterwards was a considerable challenge.

Continuing the food theme there was a fantastic small restaurant in Kirkcudbright called Kirkpatricks which served in my opinion Michelin Star fare and their Galloway Beef was outstanding. Tom the chef used to tell us colourful tales, especially of the errant footballer Craig Bellamy, as his previous role was the chef for the Wales football team. It remains one of our Top 5 meals. After the meal we would then watch the sardonic wit of Chewing the Fat, a TV parody show which unfortunately is only shown north of the border.  

 On New Year’s Eve 1998 we headed down to Arden House, on the fringes of town for a dinner dance. There was an old gunslinger band called Specific who hit the stage during the evening. To put it mildly it was an older clientele in attendance and an older lady toppled over when dancing and fractured her arm, it was an odd evening overall.

On some of the New Year’s Eve’s there was a piper playing at midnight at the Tollbooth in Kirkcudbright. The Tollbooth itself and some of the streets and houses are featured in the timeless 1970’s cult Wickerman movie featuring Edward Woodward.

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Wickerman movie flyer. Image Credit blogspot.com

When in residence there in 2001, John mentioned that a new local festival was being touted for the following summer and thus the Wickerman festival was created. It became a red-letter date for us for the next 14 years and thankfully no-one was foolish enough in that time to arrange a wedding or christening during the Wickerman weekend!  

 

Preston Venues 18-20 Adelphi – Part 2

I have attended 11 gigs at the Adelphi placing it at No 14 on the most visited venue list. The first band I saw there were Circus from Burnley in 1995 and they were in the Inspiral Carpets mould and they were terrific fun with a hyperactive humorous lead singer.

That night signalled a fundamental sea change in relation to how I defined a gig. Before that evening I had only ever counted gigs where I had a prior intention to attend but this was a walk-in gig and we caught virtually the full set causing me to re-evaluate and count those types of gigs going forward.

The following year a lass from work Andrea informed me her mates band were playing that night and I tagged along probably no doubt prior to heading to Raiders nightclub, I cannot recall the name of the unremarkable band.

I then saw John Robb’s motley crew Goldblade who were supported by Presley. It was the first time I had witnessed them and was slightly startled but impressed by their high-octane performance. I recall them bounding across speaker stacks which is a no mean achievement in such a small venue.

In 1998 I saw local band Formula One supporting Nottingham’s Six by Seven. The main band were a dour bunch though their somewhat suffocating music had merit. They were in an extremely truculent mood perhaps expecting more crowd interaction. The lead singer stormed off at the end of the set and threw down the mic stand in a fit of pique and apparently narrowly missed Nick Godkin of this parish!

Gill sister’s boyfriend at the time was a drummer in a couple of bands and his latest one Heavy Fluid Addicts played there. I preferred his later band as this one was a bit grungy for my tastes. They were supported by Die Sect.

At the tail end of 1998 the Glasgow miserabilists Arab Strap were in town and they were magnificent, readily included in my Top 5 gigs in Preston list. They didn’t hit the stage in a packed venue until about 10.15pm. They comprise of Aidan Moffat with his laconic tales of drinking and loves lost supplemented by Malcolm Middleton behind him with lashings of atmospheric guitar work. At about 10.55 Aidan began muttering darkly they only had time for one more prior to the 11pm curfew so proceeded belligerently to play a superbly noisy twenty-minute outro track!    

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Arab Strap on stage. Image Credit BBC.

Following that I saw a trio bill of local bands Formula One, Iota and Karma. Two of the original members of Galaxie 500, badged as Damon and Naomi played at the tail end of 98. It was very much a loungecore setting with seating and hushed audience where anyone coughing sounded loud alongside the dreamy acoustic music, they were a tad twee for my tastes.

In July 99, I saw Angelica, an all-girl punk band from Lancaster featuring Holly Ross on vocals who later with her husband formed the Lovely Eggs. I had picked up on them via their fine album ‘The End of a Beautiful Career’ with the two cracking singles ‘Why Did you let my Kitten Die’ and ‘Bring Back Her Head’, two tracks combining sultry vocals with astonishingly dark lyrics! Unfortunately, they had a shocker that night with sound problems and false starts and they stormed off hallway through the set. They were supported by LoFi Radio.

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Angelica promo picture. Image Credit You Tube Dee Raz

There then followed a hiatus at the venue for around a decade due I think to their PA being stolen. My final two gigs there were to see Midnight Landing, a ska band formed at Kendal college in 2012 and to see Bingo Boy in 2012.  

One night in 2014 in the corner of the Adelphi Main Bar I saw an acoustic act called Chris and Josh playing.

In May 2015, North End blew promotion on the final day, before subsequently and triumphantly breaking their 26 year play off hoodoo by battering Swindon 4-0 at Wembley.  We sought solace in the Adelphi Beer Garden where a band called Drinking Whiskey were performing.