Glasgow Venue 4 – ABC

Geographically Preston has always been an advantageous centre point of the West Coast main line resulting in reaching London or Glasgow/Edinburgh in a 2.5-hour rail journey. The trips North were infinitely more financially viable and aesthetically pleasing than the more expensive trips to the South.

Thus, Uncle George, John Dewhurst and I could be found in a train carriage in June 2005 heading up to a Mogwai gig in Glasgow. We lodged in the Premier Inn at the western end of Sauchiehall Street, adjacent to Charing Cross train station. After a couple of bevvies and some tea at a Chinese buffet establishment, we headed in high spirits to the venue to identify some stage times, only to discover to our chagrin that the gig had been cancelled due to the drummer having incurred an injury.

The disappointment was further compounded when after returning home I discovered an e-mail informing in advance of the cancellation, but this was in the days when I only checked my messages sporadically!

We encountered a gracious chap on a laptop who undertook a search for alternate gigs in Glasgow, but no viable options were unearthed. As the night now had no primary focus it morphed into an extensive pub crawl with memories of a late cellar bar supping Kronenbourg Blanc, a beer which I have not touched since.

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Kronenbourg Blanc Jimmy? – Not for me thankyou! Image Credit beercrank.ca

In the morn, John was on an earlier train than us and his fragile nodder was not aided by a group of lads heading to Download Festival and their resultant noisy tuneage! George and I stumbled around the Glasgow hills and hollows before catching an afternoon train. Due to George’s Virgin train role, we very fortuitously garnered a first-class seat and had recovered sufficiently to sample some hair of the dog vino on the return leg home.

The gig was rescheduled for 18/08/05 but only John and I could attend as George couldn’t obtain the time off work but for the two of us it had now become a matter of principle to attend! The gig was at the ABC on Sauchiehall Street which had opened as a concert hall that year with Sum 41 being the opening day act. Mogwai are always fierce advocates of Glasgow venues so had set up an early gig there. I still wish I could have caught them playing at the likes of Nice and Sleazy, a small local bar, earlier in the career but to be fair I have not fallen short in my Mogwai attendances!

The ABC name sparked memories of it being one of the two main cinemas in Preston alongside the Odeon and the Pearl and Dean adverts they used to play. I was more of an Odeon boy, or the Palace in Longridge so can only recall visiting once to watch Jaws 2.

The ABC has a rich history opening in 1875 and has at different points been a theatre, circus, dancehall, ice skating rink and a cinema. In May 1896, it hosted Glasgow’s first public film showing. The cinema closed for the last time in 1999 and was renovated into a 1300 capacity hall. It operated as a venue for 13 years, until on 15/06/18 the Glasgow School of Art caught fire and the flames ripped through the ABC’s turquoise roof, however the 143-year-old entrance remained standing. The latest I heard was that sadly the property was due to be demolished.   

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Glasgow ABC on a Chemikal Underground record label anniversary night. Image Credit able2uk.com

In the gig, we encountered a couple of other lads from Preston who had also attended the original aborted event. It was a sonic attack with their intent displayed by opening with ‘Glasgow Mega Snake’ and the main set including ‘Summer’, ‘Were No Here’, ‘New Paths to Helicon Part 1’ and ‘2 Rights Make 1 Wrong’. The encore incorporated ‘Mogwai Fear Satan’ and ‘Like Herod’. We departed with ears ringing and glad that we made the return sabbatical trip to see them.   

Manchester Venues 50 and 51

Now, I have endeavoured where possible to review all the venues in a chronological order, but I must say I had to check back in the Jimmy archives to ascertain which was my 50th venue in Manchester. It transpires that it is Joshua Brooks which is a pub on Princess St opposite the Garratt pub and on the adjacent corner to the FAC251 venue, located in the old Factory Records, a place I have not yet managed to visit.

When I checked back at the nomenclature for the venue, I unearthed that Joshua Brookes (JB) was an Anglican chaplain born in Cheadle Hulme in 1754 and seemed an unremarkable chap apart from the fact that his father was nicknamed Pontius Pilate by the virtue of his violent temper.

JB is portrayed in a Mrs Linnaeus Banks novel The Manchester Man that follows the life of a Manchester resident, Jabez Clegg who also had a public house on Oxford Road named after him. There is also a quotation from that novel that forms the epitaph on the tombstone of Factory Records founder Tony Wilson. 

    

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Joshua Brooks pub. Image Credit foodanddrinkguides.co.uk

The pub opened in 1993 and has a ground floor craft ale bar with a small music space downstairs which lays claim to being the Chemical Brothers first ever residency when they were at the University in the city.

My first visit was on 24/05/13 as the night’s last venue at the Dot-to-Dot festival prior to catching the late train at Piccadilly Station. The band in question was Story Books but to be fair, they weren’t particularly memorable though I did remember them saying they had undertaken a hellish journey traffic wise from somewhere down South and just arrived in time for their 11.30 pm slot.

My second and final musical encounter was prior to an Arab Strap gig at the Ritz when we heard a local synth band called DENOVA playing, and we managed to catch a portion of their performance.  

My personal choice of site for buying gigs tickets is ENTS24 as I have always found them very reliable and infinitely less corporate than Ticketmaster. Alongside their ticket distribution they regularly list unusual venues that you tend not to find on other sites. Thus, every time I attend a gig, I always have a gander to see if there is a sister event the same evening.

So, on 30/10/11 prior to a F%**$d Up gig at Sound Control we headed to an innocuous looking unit near the Oxford Road end of Charles St, opposite the new Circle Square development. It looked like a generic office space but when you headed down the stairs to the Base Bar you entered an Aladdin’s cave of an all-day punk event. It seemed to be a very short-lived venue as I never saw any other events listed there, but it was a privilege to attend something that resembled a hidden guerrilla gig.   

Annoyingly the last band had just finished their set, so we camped at the bar and the next band up were a local four-piece called Dangerous Aces who were a very high-octane punk band, and they were fabulous fun. The other band we witnessed was a long-standing group from Macclesfield called Kirkz. We bade our farewell but what an interesting noisy interlude it had provided!

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Dangerous Aces debut album Deny all Responsibility. Image Credit collective-zine.co.uk