Beacons Festival 2012

Skipton is a traditional historic market town in North Yorkshire, located about an hour’s drive from Preston. It contains a rather fine 14th century castle which was Yorkshire’s last Royalist stronghold when it was besieged during the English Civil War. When we heard about a new festival taking place near the town at Heslaker Farm on the Funkirk Estate, we thought it was well worth a foray over to check it out.

The Moor Music festival was held in Ilkley, West Yorkshire from its inception in 2006 and was a non-corporate sponsored event and had a considerable green eco slant and featured local bands. The shindig moved to Heslaker Farm for the 2009 and 2010 editions before rebadging itself as the Beacons Festival for the 2011 event. It remained there until 2015 before morphing again into a short-lived tri-city event in Leeds, Liverpool and Manchester called Beacons Metro.  

However, the 2011 version which we purchased tickets for was hit by unseasonably inclement weather resulting in its cancellation and our tickets were carried over to the August 2012 festival. We managed to purloin some digs at the hugely inviting Woolly Sheep pub located on Sheep Street which is known locally as the ‘Woolly’. It is owned by the Timothy Taylor brewery, and they stock some very fine beers.  

Woolly Sheep pub. Image Credit c.yell.com

We had a day ticket for the Saturday so on arrival in Skipton we had a wander round the town followed by a hearty lunch before heading over in a taxi to the site. It was a very rural setting and quite a small site literally attached to the working farm, but a 1000 times smaller than what I would envisage the Glastonbury site to be!

You could wholly understand the previous year’s cancellation as despite a batch of decent weather the ground remained a quagmire and there were not many dry seating points on the grass. On the upside though they rather excitingly had the first real ale tent I had seen at a festival before it subsequently became a staple tent item at future events.    

There were two main stages, namely Stool Pigeon and the Noisey/Vice stage and we gravitated between both areas.  On the forenamed stage we initially saw a singer songwriter called Tom Finian.  The next act was 2:54, a decent shoegazey act from London comprised of the Thurlow sisters who had just recently released their self-titled debut album.

An hour later we saw the Japandroids set. They are a punky act from Vancouver and were touring their touted second album Celebration Rock and they created a rather fine racket; and they remain in circulation to this day. They were followed by Obaro Ejimiwe, who is better known as Ghostpoet from London. He has been twice Mercury Prize nominated and I enjoyed his unique sound.   

We saw more acts over on the Noisey/Vice stage, the initial one being Best Friends, a group of pals who met at university and provided some noisy guitar fuzz. Next up was Plank from Manchester who had a 60’s space rock feel about them.  Following them was Paws from Scotland who have now produced four albums of off-kilter guitar tunes in the similar vein to Swearin and No Age. Their first ever show at the Stereo Café Bar in Glasgow in 2010 was supporting the Dum Dum Girls.

Beacons Festival site. Image Credit blogspot.com

We saw Archy Ivan Marshall, a singer/rapper who has many pseudonyms, but that day played under the moniker King Krule.  My favourite band of the day was Swim Deep, a woozy dream pop band from Birmingham, who were later cited as part of the Digbeth-based B-town movement. They had a really nice vibe to them, though the sound could have been a tad louder for my tastes.

The final act we saw was Eagulls from Leeds who were in the post punk mould and the lead singer George Mitchell had an element of Ian Curtis in his stage persona.  They subsequently split in 2019 with George then becoming a painter and starting a new musical project.

We managed to book a taxi back to the digs and reached the pickup point by stumbling through dark fields which reminded me of the early Wickerman festivals.

Preston Venue 40 – Victoria Inn

Lostock Hall, a small village three miles south of Preston city centre, has its origins dating way back to 1212 when James de Lostock built the original Lostock’s Hall, the settlement which then subsequently expanded to create the village of today.

It contains its own train station which resides on the Preston to Blackburn line, I have travelled the line many times and embarked at every station. The first stop returning from Blackburn is Mill Hill, which is handy on away football trips as it is within walking distance of Ewood Park, Blackburn’s stadium. The next alighting point is Pleasington, a leafy suburb with a couple of nearby pubs.

Lostock Hall train station pictured in 1965. Image Credit Flickr.

The train then trundles on to Cherrytree, with again a couple of decent boozers very near to the station. I recall one evening residing in one of the establishments where there was a huge group of inebriated young lads waiting for a coach to Manchester Airport for a very late flight to Ibiza, I remember thinking I was glad I wasn’t booked on that aeroplane!  

I remember also on a Christmas night out one year there was a huge carpet on snow deposited from the sky in the afternoon, resulting in the bizarre situation of having a clear snow lit view out of the window when returning on the midnight express.  The train then runs through Lostock Hall and Bamber Bridge, the latter stop I have visited once, and it has a level crossing across the main drag.

My first train foray to Lostock Hall was in 1993 when a huge group of us from work attended our colleague Louise Mariner’s 21st party at the Royal British Legion club on Brownedge Road. We gathered in the back room of the Railway pub in Preston, where I recall watching Colin Jackson break the 110m hurdles world record in the World Athletics championship taking place in Stuttgart.

En arrival in Lostock Hall we visited the Railway pub (long since gone), the Pleasant Retreat (now Lostock Ale), Tardy Gate (rebadged as the Wishing Well), all of which were within easy walking distance of the Legion. After the shindig had finished, we headed over in a fleet of taxis to the Poachers pub and my one and only visit to the Whisper’s nightclub in Bamber Bridge, twas a very good night!

I have visited the Anchor inn down Croston Road and the legendary but very small Sangam Indian restaurant. I also used to play a few frames at the Elite Snooker Club down Coote Lane.  

The village’s musical heritage has incorporated an annual festival called LostFest. The other public house in the district is the Victoria Inn, a large boozer located a handy three-minute walk to the station. The pub was subject to a £250k revamp in 2017 and reopened with a shortened name of the Vic. They have a small stage to the right of the front entrance where bands play.

Victoria Inn. Image Credit media-cdn.tripadvisor.com

As my friend Jez Catlow is a lifelong resident, living five minutes from the Vic, I have visited a couple of times to see him play in a couple of different bands. There were a large group of us who attended to watch the local punk legends Pike on 26/04/14. On that very day local football team Chorley FC were promoted back to Conference level. They played a long set and were still on stage when we had to depart to catch the 00.01 train back into Preston.

A year later another posse headed to the Vic to see his other more soothing alter ego combo Deadwood Dog supported that evening by Maelor Hughes, a folk singer from Accrington.

A topical postscript is that today (12/11/22) I am over in the fair city of Preston to watch the match and then off to the New Continental to watch 999 supported by the aforementioned Pike!