Gigs from Abroad Part 23 – Belfast Part 1

Perhaps in comparison to many other European cities, Belfast has encountered a particularly varied and challenging history. It all began as an English settlement in 1613 and evolved into becoming the capital and the primary port of Northern Ireland. Along the way they had the small matter of a rebellion in 1798, joined the GB union two years later and gained their city status in 1888.

They were the largest linen manufacturers in the 1900’s and also utilised the waterfront with their huge shipyards which covered around a quarter of all UK trade. One of the chief proponents were Harland (not the Manchester City player!) and Wolff, who were responsible for that big ship called the HMS Titanic which they built in 1911 for a cost of £1.5 million, which now equates to a contemporary cost of £180 million. The company still have their famous landmark (known as Samson and Goliath) within the now titled Titanic Quarter and their vastly overpriced museum. The structure has been utilised as a backdrop to many TV shows.

Harland and Wolff cranes. Image Credit Northern Ireland

The ‘Troubles’ commenced in the 1920’s with an astounding occurrence of over 2000 bombings in a single kilometre area of the city centre between 1969 and 1977. Anyone who lived through this period even from a geographical position from across the water will recall that you eventually became somewhat anaesthetised to the regular bloody headlines on the daily news feeds. I have worked in government offices all my life and I recall the monotonous regularity of bomb scares, and in those days you didn’t argue and ensured you exiting the building post haste!

There is a recent BBC documentary titled ‘Once Upon a Time in Northern Ireland’ which has interviews with people from both sides of the divide, many who had never publicly spoken about it before. It is an astounding bruising watch and investigative TV at the top of its game.

The historic Good Friday agreement was struck and signed on 10th April 1998, memorably prefaced in Billy Bragg’s idiosyncratic style on his 1996 track ‘Northern Industrial Town’ off the ‘William Bloke’ album. This has resulted in the regeneration of the central area of the city into a vibrant tourist location, but the old hostilities remain in the suburbs and will probably take a generational change before they hopefully finally dissipate.

Billy Bragg. Image Credit theconcertdatabase.com

Perhaps understandably set against that tumultuous backdrop the city was immersed in the punk scene with my faves Stiff Little Fingers early output including ‘Suspect Device’, ‘Tin Soldiers’ and ‘Wasted Life’ which literally oozed with barely concealed anger and disillusionment. Fellow city residents were the Undertones who were managed briefly by Terri Hooley of the Good Vibrations record shop and label, who famously dropped a tape into John Peel of ‘Teenage Kicks’, and the rest as they say is history!

They are the smallest city to host the MTV Europe Music awards in 2011 and in 2021 became the third British location after Glasgow and Liverpool to be awarded the UNESCO City of Music. They have two universities and two airports, the George Best Belfast City in the centre and the International airport located fifteen miles to the west. Many famous people have Belfast as their place of birth and these include David Trimble, Ian Paisley, Gerry Adams, George Best, CS Lewis the author of Chronicles of Narnia and the musician Van Morrison.

I have visited twice, and the first trip was with Gill and a couple of friends in 2009. Fortunately, Blackpool Airport was still operational then, so we headed out from there with only a handful of customers on the flight whilst encountering the novel situation where they deliberately spaced us around the plane to ensure the required balance! We then traversed in on the 45 minute shuttle bus ride and had a hotel near to, but not in the Europa which is the most frequently bombed hotel in Europe.

Hotel Europa. Image Credit drifttravel.com

With a remarkable flurry of late results my football team Preston North End had managed to secure an unexpected end of season play off tie against Sheffield United. However, the kicker was that the first home leg was on the day of our outward travel. So, it transpired that I was watching the first half in a very busy bar on a small TV with no sound from a fair distance away and randomly swore at one point with other punters looking at me askance!

At least we had a better viewpoint and a seat in another bar to observe the second half. Still no volume, but we had cold Harp (tastes sharp until the bottom of the glass!) on tap. We drew 1-1 that night but unsurprisingly lost the second leg three days later. We had a fine 48 hours there and took a liking for the vibrant student areas and had a fantastic meal at the Red Panda Chinese restaurant located very close to the famous Crown Liquor Saloon.

A postscript this week is that I have hit a literary milestone of 200k words in total thus far in my 293 articles. For the record, the 100k word was Manchester and slightly anti climatically the 200k word is ‘place’, though pertinent as either the venue or in this context as city of birth.

Manchester Venues 176 to 177

LEAF began in 2007 as a small tea shop run by friends located within a Liverpool city centre gallery before swiftly moving up to a larger setting in Parliament Street where they hosted pudding clubs and album launches. They upgraded again in 2010 when they moved to their current home on Bold Street and they stock over sixty varieties of rare teas and have won various awards.

They decided to expand into another city and in 2016 opened up Manchester LEAF on Portland Street in the Grade II listed site where the CUBE gallery used to reside. They described themselves as having a ‘semi-Scandanavian feel’ and there were three separate private spaces available for business or private dining events, with room for either thirty, seventy or three hundred guests. They served food all day and had a licence until 2am at the weekends. I have just read though that the  Manchester branch closed its doors permanently in 2022.

Manchester LEAF. Image Credit premierconstructionnews.com

I visited there just twice (but on the same day) as the venue was on the roster for the 2018 Dot to Dot festival and the place had a welcoming bohemian feel to it. Our first arrival was around 5.30 in the afternoon where we grabbed a cold one and on a pop up stage we saw a singer/songwriter called Tom Lumley playing.  He derived originally from a small village in Cambridgeshire, and it was a solo performance. Since then, he has formed a band called Tom Lumley &The Brave Liaison who released their debut album ‘Everything’s Affected in 2021.    

Much later on that day, we returned and caught the last song from a four piece called MCRAE who initially formed in 2013. They however broke up a decade later by rather appropriately playing their last ever gig on 27/05/23 at the site of their first ever show on Barnoldswick Town Square.

There then occurred a ‘sliding doors’ moment as at that stage Uncle George, John Dewhurst and I were just looking for one last drink before sending the lads home on the last train back to Preston. The bar had just shut in Leaf, so after a quick discussion we then headed down randomly to the Temple Bar.

MCRAE. Image Credit louderthanwar.com

When we sat down I was approached by a chap who asked if he could sit by us and I noticed his Dot to Dot wristband and we got to chatting about music, Mogwai and his Coventry background. This chap turned out to be Marcus who at various later dates was my conduit to meeting his girlfriend Anita, his old pal Tris and her fella Ross.

Gill and I are now firm friends with them all and I then think back that if Leaf had still been serving beers we would in all likelihood have never met, a situation that would sadden me greatly. Marcus and I have now attended around eighty gigs together, but we still joke about the fact that we initially met in a bar that used to be a public toilet!   

In 2016, the owners of NoHo and Dusk til Pawn decided to open a European style subterranean beer hall in the Northern Quarter. Their venue of choice was to base Manchester Cooper Hall in the old location of Copacabana salsa club in Sevendale House off Dale Street. Within there they incorporated street food traders, DJ’s and a plethora of European beers including freshly brewed Czech Republic Tank Pilsener Urquell within the 300 capacity space.  

Manchester Cooper Hall. Image Credit confidentials.com

The name was selected to pay homage to the history of the building, which was originally completed in 1903 and utilised as a trade warehouse for I.J & G Cooper. There was an extensive £6m refurbishment in 2014 of the 120,000 square feet Grade II listed site, and other tenants include Foundation Coffee and Ticketmaster.

The hall had a vintage feel with reclaimed wood benches and tables and original features including glazed brick walls and large skylight windows and I took an instant liking to the place though I have just read that the bar sadly permanently closed in 2022. 

It was also selected as a venue on 2018 Dot to Dot monorail and on our particular visit we saw a local combo called Champions of Youth, a five-piece indie act who rose from the ashes of previous band Amida. Amida were highly touted when they formed in 2005 and garnered support slots with the likes of Tender Trap, Camera Obscura and Subway Sect prior to their split in 2012. The group we saw had a vibe of late 1980’s and 1990’s and I could understand the cited reference points of Pavement and the Wolfhounds.