2021 Gigs – Part 2

I am continuing to look at the post-apocalypse year of 2021 where I somehow managed to attend 33 gigs. There is a suite of new venues in this year which will be featured in future blogs, however I am going to focus on the venues already visited and covered in previous articles.

On the 21st of August, I managed to finally return over to Preston and have my first night out there for 18 months. After watching PNE in the afternoon, Uncle George and I met up with John Dewhurst and we had a sally down the pubs on Friargate. This included a visit to the ever-unchanged Preston Olde Black Bull, where there was a thunderously loud band called Law and Order playing in the main room. It was low quality fare, and its only relevant significance was the fact that it was my 200th gig in Preston.

We also headed up to Preston Market where they have now put in place a deserved tribute bench to commemorate Preston’s very own Nick Park, the abundantly imaginative creator of Wallace and Gromit and Shaun the Sheep, now I have mentioned it please try and stop yourself humming the theme tune to Wallace & Gromit. He also coincidentally attended the same secondary school as myself though he was a few years above me.

Nick Park bench with the chap himself. Image Credit wallaceandgromit.com

As we walked up Orchard Street, we could hear the unmistakeable rumble of a live band, and therefore bonus gig said I! As it was a balmy August evening, they had erected a stage at the Lancaster Road end of the covered outdoor market just beyond the Orchard Bar. After purchasing a cold craft beer, we witnessed a young local band called the Avenhams, named after one of the main parks in the city. They had an enthusiastic friends and family crowd supporting them and despite veering into lad rock at times they were enjoyable.

On the 7th September I attended my first indoor pay gig at Manchester Academy 2, the venue now clearly rattling into second place on my most visited venue list. Prior to the event and as it was a pleasant Tuesday evening, we purloined some outdoor seats at a pub that remarkably I had never visited before, which was the Ducie Arms buried behind the Manchester University campus.  

The gig was a sell-out, but I surmise that post-pandemic sold out capacities are less than previous restrictions as it clearly felt there was room to breathe in the venue, and that appears to be a sensible continuing ongoing action in my experience of the gigs I have attended since. They operated one-way systems and there was a very civilised queue at the bar, and everyone was understandably noticeably considerate of others and their own personal space. 

The band on stage was the timeless Teenage Fanclub who were in peerless form and Norman Blake had a manic grin throughout, no doubt as relieved as all of us to be back on the tour schedule. Many travelled from far and wide including Stephanie (@peripixie on twitter) who travelled in from America prior to her watching them at their spiritual home Glasgow Barrowland the following week.

Teenage Fanclub. Image Credit Tiny Mix Tapes

Post gig we went for a cold one at Big Hands further down Oxford Road. Whilst Marcus and Gill were ensconced in the roof top beer garden upstairs, I was at the bar waiting for a lengthy beer barrel change when one lad at the bar inadvertently came out to his mate, which was a slightly surreal occurrence to witness.

A month later I headed into town on the No 50 bus to Manchester Club Academy to see the scouse band Red Rum Club. It was a gentle foray as I was departing the next day for a family gathering at a large house we had rented in Matlock. I had seen them three years earlier at Peer Hat and I thought they were excellent there as the sound was so crisp. They didn’t quite scale those heights this time, and I do think seeing a band for a second time is a tester of their ability and potential longevity, much like the second viewing of a movie.

2021 Gigs – Part 1

I think it is about time that we conversed about the elephant in the room, namely the small matter of the worldwide pandemic that ripped our normal lives apart. Early breaking news stories in January and February 2020 began to indicate that something extraordinary was about to happen resulting in the first lockdown in March which for us in the North of England never really lifted for nigh on eighteen months.

There was a certain surreal novelty to the first few months as we pounded the deserted streets on our daily exercise, inadvertently serving to appraise us of our still new local area and the weather was thankfully very kind. We organised home offices with trips to the horror establishment of IKEA to purchase desks and got used to queueing everywhere and discovering new words like furlough and lateral flow tests!

Once the initial spell wore out, the isolation kicked in and both Gill and I had unpleasant bouts of Covid and I personally found the period astonishingly tough and it wasn’t even as if I was living on my own, so I can only imagine the challenges faced by millions of other people, and I am sure we will all have our personal tales and experiences. I know people who took it all in their stride and I am glad they could cope admirably with the enforced change, but I was not in that number.

I think the absolute nadir was reached at Christmas 2020 when the ability to gather with family and friends was severely curtailed. On a very cold 29th December we arranged to meet our good friends Jo and Paul at a local park, resulted in us finding a muddy picnic bench to sit on.

On the bench was left abandoned a plastic sword which we christened the sword of Gryffindor, which at the very point became the overriding pandemic symbol for us! We imbibed whiskey and brandy laced coffee until it went dark and then we separately walked home with tears in our eyes because we had nowhere else to go and like 99% of the population, we were compliant with the Government rules!

The Sword of Gryffindor. Image Credit shpock.com

Music also dropped off my radar for a fair while and I didn’t invest in the podcasts or live streaming gigs as I stubbornly wouldn’t settle for anything less than the real live experience. Now people who know me would say I am generally by nature a pragmatic, glass half full kind of chap, so apologies for the maudlin tone of this article, but it has tended to pour out of me as I was typing away, however I think it is high time l lifted the mood now.    

So, three very instrumental elements contributed to the upturn in fortunes. The first was the very existence of this blog and the therapeutic weekly routine it instilled. Alongside this, was my burgeoning interest and following on Twitter via interaction and invaluable support from some terrific and knowledgeable like-minded folk who shared my musical passion, who I have affectionally coined as ‘muso geeks’!

The second was the introduction of the vaccines which led to the very exciting third development, the return of live music. So, from the last rather strange pre-pandemic gig of Nada Surf on 12/03/20, it was 477 days or 11,448 hours to 03/07/21 (but who’s counting!) before I witnessed another gig, which is not unsurprisingly my longest dry spell ever!  

Nada Surf. Image Credit Rolling Stone