Manchester Venue 193 – Castlefield Bowl

The Castlefield area of Manchester has an abundance of historical context within its borders. It was the site of the Roman fort of Mamucium/Mancunium that evolved into the later name of Manchester, and it contained the terminus of the Bridgewater Canal, the world’s first industrial waterway initially built in 1764.

Additionally, there is another world premiere with the first ever passenger railway terminating at Liverpool Road railway station in 1830, which is a Grade I listed building and was sold for a princely sum of £1 and is now part of the impressive Science and Industry Museum.

There is also the Castlefield basin which was where the old coal and yarn wharfs where located and which has gone through a major rejuvenation over the last couple of decades. Luxury flats, pubs and restaurants have appeared including the Wharf with its decent tucker and Dukes 92 with its huge outdoor seating area, the pub being named after Lock 92 where the canals originally merged. Castle Quay there now houses Hits Radio and Greatest Hits Radio.

Castlefield Basin. Image Credit Manchester Evening News

Castlefield was designated as a conservation area in 1980 and then the United Kingdom’s initial designated urban heritage park in 1982. There is the elevated and rather chilly Deansgate-Castlefield tram stop, which was previously named G-Mex. There used to be a direct path that took you past the G-Mex (where 33 years ago I saw Madness) and straight into the Great Northern complex, but that has now been partially blocked off.

If you decline to take the steps down from the station you can then gain access to the Castlefield Viaduct. This was built in 1892 and there has recently been a roof garden created which can be seen from passing trains and trams and is open for visits in the summer months.

From that high vantage point there are a set of circular steps that drops you to a grassy area in front of the aforementioned fort which has been partially rebuilt. When I have traversed that route I have quite often noted that the area is home to a couple of what I shall coin as the ‘Castlefield Swans’ who own that patch. On one particular occasion I witnessed them having a fun day out as they strutted noisily down a busy Deansgate and as a result caused chaos during the peak commuter time!

There are a few more steps down from ‘Swan With Two Necks’ (not ‘Lake’ as there is no water feature!) which brings you into Castlefield Bowl. The site was rebuilt in 1993 by creating an amphitheatre with a semi-cantilever structure which became a natural home to stage gigs and events with a capacity of 8,450.

Castlefield Bowl. Image Credit ilovemanchester.com

The first show there was Ian Brown on Millenium eve 1999. Other bands to play there include Noel Gallagher, Arcade Fire and New Order and the site was utilised as a Fan Park during the 2010 Football World Cup. In 2017 it was decided to set up an annual event of shows across a couple of summer weekends under the banner of the Sounds of the City festival.    

I had always wanted to visit the arena after seeing it regularly when heading into the city on the train, and my first opportunity presented itself at the 2018 shindig. The gig on Friday 6th July was during the sweltering 2018 World Cup summer, and I recall our group watching the second half of the France v Uruguay quarter final in the Footage pub on Oxford Road before grabbing some tea in the nearby Hatch complex.

We then gravitated to nearer to the venue with a visit to the Deansgate pub. Upon arrival, I discovered it to be a well-designed area with a good view of the stage from any vantage point. The spur for purchasing the tickets initially was to catch the old troubadour Elvis Costello for the first time who was the designated support act on the night. However, he became ill shortly before and had to cancel a few dates including ours and he was replaced by the Buzzcocks.

The headline act was Paul Heaton & Jacqui Abbott who most certainly have the tunes including in my view one of the finest ever opening lines of ‘I love you from the bottom of my pencil case’. An entertaining aspect was that as the trains have a panoramic view of the stage, one stopped for a decent length of time on the overlooking bridge as the guard was obviously a fan. He was taking numerous photos resulting in cheers from the crowd alongside some highly bemused punters looking out of the other train windows!  

My other attendance was on the 5th of July 2022 where the pre-drinks and nibbles venue this time was Mackie Mayors. In the bowl, there are some seats set back in front of the stage, and I could hear my name being hollered repeatedly in the style of Dustin Hoffman in the Graduate. It turned out to be none other than my pal Ian ‘Milly’ Millington who was perched on the back row. I then navigated a route through the busy crowd to have a parlay, and my ascent resembled Pat Cash at the Centre Court at Wimbledon. Numerous punters asked me as I passed if I was Jimmy, before chortling to themselves!   

The Pat Cash clamber. Image Credit wimbledon.com

The support band were Slow Readers Club followed by the headliners Pixies. I decided for old times sake to drag my young 54 year old body into the vibrant mosh pit. One of the crew Tim accompanied me wearing his newly purchased Primark trainers that were in a sorry state by the end of the gig. There were appraising looks from one group of young whippersnappers due to my age before mosh pit etiquette was applied, and a respectful nod of the head was provided! 

Gigs From Abroad Part 25 – More Spanish Gigs

I have visited many places in Spain, including the islands of Majorca, Fuerteventura, Gran Canaria and several trips to Lanzarote. In 2003, we undertook a backpacking trip utilising the staggeringly efficient trains (like most of Europe!) starting in Seville, a city that we aim to revisit one day. We then gravitated northwards to Madrid, Zaragoza and Barcelona.

About ten years ago we obtained a large villa in San Pedro and jetted off with all Gill’s family, making a grand total of thirteen of us. There were challenges in booking restaurants on the nights we decided to eat out as in some smaller places we took up half of the establishment! There was a pool table in situ and an epic doubles match ensued, with the final nights play live on Sky Sports! The youngest brother-in-law Phil and I eventually triumphed 17-15 after a titanic battle.

There was a coastal path from there which weaved you through to the town of Marbella where the ‘beautiful’ people lived! Millie Bobby Brown of Stranger things fame was born there, while Rick Parfitt lived there for many years as did actor Mike Reid. Thinking of Mr Reid, his Eastenders stint doesn’t come to mind, but what I recall most fondly is his presentation of the children’s TV programme Runaround, with his cockney catchphrase ‘Runaround Naahh’!

Mike Reid on Runaround. Image Credit dailyrecord.co.uk

In 2016, Gill and I stayed in Torremuelle, which is situated between Malaga and Fuengirola. There is a superbly handy train that runs between those two towns, and I can proudly say in the entire fifteen days we were away; we did not catch one single taxi as we walked or used the trains each day benefitting from the fact that there is also a stop at the airport. Remarkably though we didn’t manage to witness any music on that trip but enjoyed the culmination of the Euro 2016 football tournament and Andy Murray winning his second Wimbledon.

In August 2019 we had a cheeky week away with Gill’s sister and brother-in-law in Marbesa which is located close to the areas above and is within the Costa Del Sol enclave. There were a plethora of resorts nearby including Cabopino Beach were using old vernacular the ‘lucky lucky’ chaps endeavour to sell you their wares including one who had an original sales pitch by stating that the products were ‘genuine genuine fakes’!  

One logistic problem we identified en arrival was the dearth of a local supermarket, so there were daily trogs of a mile each way, the out route obviously being up a steep hill in blistering sunshine, the upside being that it kept us fit with weights training of hauling the bottled water back to base!

There was a smattering of restaurants on the seafront nearby with the centrepiece being Marbesa Simbad Restaurant & Beach Bar where we had a couple of meals and imbibed several cold ones. The restaurant has apparently been there for over 25 years but some of the recent reviews suggest it has now lost its way. On one of our visits there was a Kylie Minogue tribute act playing, though she was admittedly a very pale imitation and from the non-Australian city of Cardiff.

Marbesa Simbad bar. Image Credit vitadent-clinic.com

In late summer 2025 we headed away again with the same group, this time to Calpe, which is located in the Marina Alta beyond Benidorm, and we travelled in via Alicante airport. Their economy is based primarily on tourism and fishing and imperiously overlooking the resort is the Northern Rock signifying the start of the Penyal d’Ifac Natural Park. Apparently from the top vantage point you see as far as Ibiza.

It reminds me a little of pictures of the Rock of Gibraltar, but more so its resemblance to the alien artefact that Richard Dreyfuss constructed out of mashed potato in the Steven Spielberg Close Encounters of the Third Kind movie.    

Richard Dreyfuss in Close Encounters. Image Credit ar.inspiredpencil.com

There was a restaurant near the hotel called Calpe El Chiringuito where we saw a chap called Pedro playing and adjacent to there was the large Calpe Unusual Hotel where on a pop up stage, we saw Beko performing. Even nearer to the hotel was Calpe Rocce Club where we witnessed an artist with the unoriginal name of Party Singer.  

Behind the resort a sharp incline took you up to the old town where there was located a plethora of places to eat and which had more ambience and atmosphere than the seafront area. At an open-air establishment named Calpe Los Dos Canones Raul was providing some acoustic tuneage. Down another winding alley from there brought you to Calpe Restaurant Con Alba where we saw Rafa performing.