Stockport Venue 11 – Spinning Top

I am continuing the tale this week of Stockport gigs and will begin wending my way in towards the town centre. However, I will initially take a brief cultural diversion if I may as I have just discovered that a large property called ‘Ferncliff’ on Mauldeth Road  is up for sale. The dilapidated house which contains ten bedrooms, and five receptions rooms is on the market for cash offers around £1.6million! The reason for my referencing is that it was used as the location for the 2019 quirky dystopian Russell T Davies scripted Years and Years TV series.

So, picking up from beyond Heaton Chapel train station, this leads you to Wellington Road North which astonishingly runs you later on into Wellington Road South, who would credit it! It is more commonly known as the A6 and the route of a Manchester institution, the 192 bus! Transport has run down this route from Hazel Grove to Manchester city centre since 1889, commencing with horse drawn trams before it was later numbered as the 192 in 1969.

The 192 Bus. Image Credit flickr.com

The buses are astoundingly regular and there are even night services at the weekends, and it is recognised as the busiest route in the country with 9m annual passengers and in 2008 became the first in Britain to have solar-powered on-street ticket machines. In 2013 a local singer called Dave Hulston devised a whole album in commemoration called ‘Willow and the 192’ which spawned a one-off festival called ‘192 Accoustifest’ at the M19 bar in Stockport.

There must be something in the local water supply as Elbow in their track ‘Great Expectations’ reference the 135 Bury to Manchester bus and the Manchester Blog winner, also in 2013, was penned by philosophy PHD student Geoff Stevenson who was musing about his travels to Manchester University aboard the 43 bus from Wythenshawe.      

Now obviously when you move to a new area you want to try and darken the doors of all the public houses at least once to tick them off, I am assuming that is a standard aspiration for anybody, or maybe just me! In this regard, plans were afoot to have a sally down and visit the four A6 Heaton Norris hostelries on the outskirts of Stockport, but this was scuppered by the pandemic.

By the time I managed to make the pilgrimage in 2024 with Uncle George in tow, the number of available pubs had halved. The first closure was the Hope Inn that had a microbrewery enclosed within which produced their own brand of Fool Hardy ales. It reopened fleetingly post-covid but then was struck by lighting and then closed for good and has now reopened as a branch of the Mother Hubbard’s fish and chip chain. They now have 19 sites, including one in Dubai with the first opened by Coronation Street’s Stan and Hilda Ogden in Bradford in 1972 and the price then for fish and chips was a paltry 45p!

The Railway pub. Image Credit Jimmy Crossthwaite

The other pub was the Railway where they used to have Jazz gigs every Sunday and Tuesday and rather poignantly the chalk board outside is still showing details on the gigs that were scheduled for March 2020 before the sudden universal closures. At least the jazz gigs survived by relocating to the Moor Club in Heaton Moor.

However, the ‘jewel in the crown’ the Magnet Free House was most definitely open and is a real ale pub renowned across the area. It was originally a coaching inn built in 1840 due its close proximity to the now long gone Heaton Norris train station before latterly refurbishing into its current format in 2009. It is a terrific boozer with around 25 ales on tap and numerous staff serving behind the small bar. It was packed on a Saturday teatime, and we decamped to the decent size beer garden outside where they also had a pizza oven in full operation.

It also has the accolade of being named as one of the 12 ‘best boozers’ in the UK by National Geographic in 2024 with their ratings based around an aversion to loud music, Sky Sports and ordering with QR codes. Gill and I have visited since and worryingly discovered there is a bus stop outside that provides a bus route close to home! Further down the hill is the Midland which is a lot less interesting where me and the Uncle played some woeful darts, Luke Littler we were not!

After you cross the River Mersey and begin to climb up again you reach Stockport Spinning Top. The venue is situated under the Garrick Theatre, where I saw Mike Harding thirty odd years ago, and first opened its doors in 2014. They have had comedy nights in the past and also showcase local original artwork on the walls which is then available to purchase.

The Spinning Top. Image Credit useyourlocal.com

They have live music taking place there four times a week, mainly in the rock vein. They appear to have a lot of cover bands playing but also have occasional original acts and I can find records of the late 80’s popsters The Distractions playing there in 2017. On the same night we visited the Magnet we made our debut visit to the venue.

It was a fairly spartan lay out with the bar to the right and the stage to the left. The band performing were Paytron Saint, a three piece alt-rock band who hail from the Amber Valley in Derbyshire. They formed in 2018 and have released a slew of singles so far, mainly recorded at their own Chicken Coop studio. They were fully acoustic on the night, and they were very enjoyable.    

Manchester Venue 175 – Night People

Manchester Night People was located on Princess Street about equidistant between China Town and Canal Street, just around the corner from the Satan’s Hollow venue. I can find very scant history online for this establishment, but I think it opened in around 2017, and I believe it closed post-covid for a 6 month refurbishment, but it looks like it never subsequently reopened.

I visited there four times in total, and I know they were included on the Psych Fest roster, an event I have never yet attended but also for the now defunct Dot-to-Dot festival which I was present at for several years.

I recall they used to stage Northern Soul shindigs for the Twisted Wheel events and due to the age now of many of the participants they staged it on a Sunday afternoon. I am sure the intimate downstairs setting would have made it an ideal location for such a gathering, and I recently located a flyer of the legendary Geno Washington and the Ram Jam band playing there in 2018. I would estimate the capacity of the venue would have been somewhere around 200.

 

Night People flyer. Image Credit mdmarchive.co.uk

My first visit was in February 2018 in the company of one of my Northeast correspondents Jamie Young. We were already attending a gig at Night and Day that evening so grabbed the opportunity to undertake an earlier foray to the new venue on the block! We met initially in the iconic Marble Arch public house before sampling some tea at the Mackie Mayors food hall and then headed down to Night People.

The first act was the Mancunian band slowhandclap who appear to play a lot of gigs at the Northern Quarter venues, and they provided a slab on noisy post punk. Also on the bill were Chester two-piece DEH-YEY who like many duos produced a fair old racket of fuzzy dark sounds with the driving force being the guitarist/vocalist Cash Burns. They have released a slew of singles thus far and have garnered a support slot for the much touted Belfast band Enola Gay.  

Three months later as part of Dot to Dot we saw an American singer songwriter called Kyle Craft. He was born in an isolated Mississippi river town in Louisiana and his first introduction to guitar music was a random purchase of a David Bowie compilation at his local Kmart store.

I think we can all attest to our own individual epiphany to hearing music that will go on to change and influence our life. My personal individual ‘journey’ (a much over used reality show phrase nowadays) was via my dad’s Neil Young and my brother’s Husker Du records and also hearing Stiff Little Fingers for the first time as a young pup at an early school disco.

An early 2018 sighting of Fontaines DC at the venue. Image Credit whenthehornblows.com

Kyle subsequently moved to Texas, and he formed a band called Gashcat who then broke up a couple of years later with the slightly bizarre reasoning of ongoing adverse comparison to Neutral Milk Hotel! In 2016, he recorded his debut album ‘Dolls of Highland’ on Sub Pop Records and then gathered together a live band callee Showboat Honey and secured a support slot with Drive-By Truckers.  

On the afternoon I saw him they produced an excellent set of deep fried Southern rock , where I could hear shades of Green on Red, Lone Justice and The Band, his strong vocal complemented by a fine backing band was a good combination. My next trip was again linked to Dot-to-Dot and the band on show this time was a local combo called ELM.

My final visit was on 26th February 2020 when the spectre of Covid was just beginning to gather pace. I attended with my pal Paul Wilson who had other Preston folk in tow including Aidy and Janet from Lostock Hall. I recall we met in one of the Wetherspoons before having a bevy at the timeless Lass O Gowry. Throughout the gig between bands there was a DJ set from writer and broadcaster Dave Haslam who is primarily famous for being DJ for over 450 sets at the Hacienda nightclub incorporating a Thursday night residency at the Temperance club night from 1986 to 1990.  

The first act on stage was Mick O Toole and the main support were the Gallowgate Murders, a five-piece Celtic punk band from Edinburgh who had only formed the year before. The headliners were the Rumjacks, a rumbustious combo from Sydney in Australia who were also in the Celtic punk mould. They were formed in 2008 and they were renowned for their energetic live shows and lived up to their billing. Their most famous song ‘An Irish Pub Song’ went viral and has garnered over 85m hits on YouTube.

The Rumjacks. Image Credit iheart.com

I recall a generous chap we had never met buying us a round at the bar before Paul and I entered the thrashing, flailing white hot intensity of the mosh pit. It had been a fair while since I had been in such a vibrant pit and my first since turning 50, and I had to recalibrate instantly to peel off my outer layer of clothing and take my watch off for safe keeping and then dived back in.

It was a very small area not helped by some inopportune bruise inducing shelves around the perimeter, but we were in there for the last hour of the gig, and it was a bloody good sweaty fun, more so in hindsight when the first lockdown kicked in a couple of weeks later!