Manchester Venues 203 to 204

Withington village is a small suburb in Manchester which is positioned four miles south of the city centre. It was a largely rural area until the mid-19th century before burgeoning during the Industrial Revolution into its own distinct enclave.

It’s geographical location close to the two Manchester universities results in it being a popular student location, but not as populous in that regard as nearby Fallowfield. In the area is also Withington Community Hospital and Christie Hospital which is home to one of the largest cancer treatment centres in Europe, the latter being the location of the world’s first clinical drug trial which took place there in 1944. The village became linked to the metro network when its own station was created in 2013.

There was a local Souchay family who lived in the area in the 19th century, and they were related to the wife of German composer Felix Mendelssohn. Mr M visited the area several times and his last British tour in 1847 incorporated performing on the freshly installed pipe organ in the local St Pauls Church before he passed away six months later at the cruelly young age of 38.   

Previous alumni include the travel correspondent Judith Chalmers, actors Ben Kingsley, Robert Powell and John Maloney (who played Frasier’s dad), cricketer Michael Atherton, broadcaster Martin Sixsmith and Alan Erasmus the co-founder (alongside Tony H Wilson) of Factory Records and the Hacienda.

Withington is about a 45 minute walk from our current residence via Fog Lane Park, which has a topical reference as it contains the playing fields in the current film The Corinthians of the all-conquering women’s football team in the 1950’s.

As you progress down Wilmslow Road past the Christie you swing by a few shops and takeaways before reaching the oldest building in the village, the impressive 17th century Red Lion pub, which was previously a coaching house. They produce a decent Sunday roast but their claim to fame in my book is their outdoor space.

Red Lion beer garden. Image Credit Facebook.

Now, I was blessed in Preston to live across from the Withytrees pub which had the biggest beer garden in the city, but the Red Lion has one twice that size with room for at least 100 punters and is tree fronted on two sides which provides a perfect sunspot to imbibe a couple of cold ones.  

Further on you reach the Orion public house which was named after the original landlord who served on the HMS Orion in the 1850’s and it is a proper no frills throwback hostelry. Nearby to there is a mural commemorating local footballer and campaigner Marcus Rashford.

Across the road, down a side street was the Wilderness Record Store, which was a small bar and music venue. I was lined up to go to a gig there in 2022 but unfortunately it closed permanently before I was able to make a visit. 

Back on Wilmslow Road you then arrive at Manchester Fuel Café, which is a thriving vegan café and bar that has been in situ there for around twenty years. It is a cosy establishment, and they undertake quiz nights and host gigs in the small, cramped space upstairs.

Manchester Fuel Cafe. Image Credit Facebook.

I discovered Fortitude Valley around the time of their excellent self-titled debut album which I highly recommend and I was then delighted to discover they were to play at the Fuel Café in July 2022. The driving force of the band is Laura Kovic, originally from Brisbane, and their name is derived from an area within the city. She then relocated to the UK and is now based in Durham. She served her apprenticeship as a keyboardist in Tigercats before forming the current combo in 2018.

It was a steaming hot day, and you could feel the humidity as your headed up the stairs. It was on a par with summer gigs in years gone by to see Snuff in New Cross and Big Black at the Boardwalk.

Thankfully the band were excellent and created a joyous energetic sugar-coated racket on stage and I was thoroughly entranced with my fave tracks on the night being ‘The Right Thing’ and ‘It’s The Hope That Kills You’. The evening concluded with a couple of drinks in the downstairs bar.  

Fortitude Valley. Image Credit punknews.org

Literally across the road is located Manchester Café Blah which from the outside has a Parisian look and indoors has subtle lighting and lots of retro film posters pasted on the walls in synch with their Thursday night Café Blah Film Club. They also host poetry nights, with the name (have you guessed it yet?) of Blah, Blah, Blah. I have also just discovered they have an Alphaville Emporium upstairs which I have not yet visited which sells art, books, vinyl and in a commendable retro step, cassettes (or mix tapes)!

A couple of months ago I heard they were staging a monthly showcase music night and was kicking my heels that evening, so I had a mulch over, obviously not influenced by it being a new venue! The gig took place in the basement which must not hold more than fifty people and I saw an abrasive set by Itchcoin.

I subsequently visited the ‘other’ Sand Bar further down the street where I had an unexpectedly terrific pint of Theakstons, which took me back to its 90’s heyday.  I enjoyed it while perched on a hugely comfy settee obviously reciting the lines in my head, ‘on the chaise longue, all day long, on the chaise longue’.  

Liverpool Venues 28 to 30

I am starting this week with a recent addition within the Mathew Street Cavern Quarter, namely Liverpool Temple Tavern. The hostelry initially opened its doors in June 2025 taking over the old Reiss store that was located there previously. They are owned by local independent Pub Invest Group who also hold the reins on forty other sites in the city including the nearby Erics and Rubber Soul.

It is split over two floors with grand interiors and comes complete with outdoor tables for those ‘summer nights’. Music is featured at various points during the week under the banner of Trad sessions and on my one foray I saw a local artist called Steve performing.

Temple Tavern. Image Credit liverpoolecho.co.uk

I now return to the Sounds of the City Festival I attended in May 2025 where our next port of call was the Jacaranda on Slater Street (known locally as the Jac). It was opened in 1958 by a forward thinking geezer called Allan Williams who leased an old watch repair shop and then transformed it into a coffee bar. It provided a stage for fledgling local bands and was a key player in the rise of Merseybeat in the 1960’s.

Four young scamps named John Lennon, Stuart Sutcliffe, George Harrison and Paul McCartney were regular visitors and were called The Silver Beetles. The first two named paid for some rehearsal space by painting murals in the cellar, which unsurprisingly remain to this day.

The venue also hosted the first ever Beatles performance in August 1960 where they played as a five-piece for 2.5 hours with the addition of Pete Best. They had to improvise microphone stands by utilising broom handles held aloft by fans. Their reward was to be paid with beans on toast and Coca-Cola, and they proceeded to deputise for the regular house band the Royal Caribbean Steel Band every Monday night.  

Jacaranda Beatles wall. Image Credit beatlesstory.com

The afore mentioned owner of the establishment secured their first tour to Hamburg also in 1960, where they actually set off from outside the Jacaranda in Mr Wiliiam’s green Austin van. He also introduced them to Richard Starkey (Ringo Starr) who was a club regular and at that stage a drummer for Rory Storm & The Hurricanes.

Cynthia Lennon cites that John completed the lyrics to ‘One After 909’ song in the venue, the song then later reappeared on the Let It Be album. Allan Williams was invited to those album recording sessions, and in the footage, John is heard to say ‘Where do you think you are? The Jacaranda?’ They parted ways after that with Brian Epstein taking over the management reins, and the rest as they say is history.    

Fast forward then to the mid-1990’s and the place was literally on its knees and in a derelict state. The new owner Graham Stanley restored it but in the upgrades was considerate of its history.

In 2018 he also launched two related record shops, coinciding with the 60th anniversary of the original opening. One was based within the original building and the other Jacaranda Baltic located nearer to the waterfront. In one of the branches, he managed to purloin a 1948 voice-o-graph booth, only one of four working versions that exist in the world. Many album launches have taken place there including Foals, Stereophonics, Wunderhorse and The Pretenders.  In 2024 a blue plaque was installed based on its Beatles connection.  

Upon entry you find yourself in the homely Jacaranda Ground Floor Bar where we saw a local singer called Freddie performing. At the top end of the large room there are steps that take you down to the main venue of Liverpool Jacaranda. It has a 400 capacity, and they have live music every night and like Cinderella morphs in another mode at the midnight hour at the weekends, with free live shows, namely Indie Rock Circus on Fridays and Rock N Roll Circus on Saturdays. The festivities are completed with open mic events on the Sunday.

The Jacaranda. Image Credit Liverpool Echo.

However, this is where I discovered one of the key challenges of this festival, even during an early afternoon slot, which was the fact that the small cellar venues were liable to fill out very quickly.

So, I had a new novel position of watching from halfway down the stairs and peering through with my nose against the glass and a muted sound travelling through the pane. But as I would arbitrate in my one man ‘gig VAR’ meetings, they all count! What I could see but only partially hear was some energetic folk sounds from Sair, who I can only obtain sketchy details about, but I think derive from Leeds.