Manchester Venue 26 – Club Academy

The fourth and final venue within the Academy complex is Club Academy. The venue is located downstairs with stairs heading down to the venue to the right of the ground floor bar. In the 90’s the venue was called the Cellar nightclub before turning into a singular music venue in the early 2000’s.

I wish we had known of the existence of the nightclub at that time as we were often searching for a late bar before catching the 1.24am train home. I had seen those stairs many times but thought they headed down to another non-public area of the building complex.

At the point in time across the road was the now disappeared Jabez Clegg pub which we frequented regularly. I was unaware that they used to have the odd gig upstairs. I recall Gordon Gibson, proprietor of Preston’s legendary Action Records telling me that he once was very fortunate to catch a private set in that very room by Natalie Merchant, 10000 Maniacs lead singer.

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Jabez Clegg Pub. Image Credit manchesterhistory.net

The capacity of Club Academy is 650, slightly larger than Academy 3 and is the most academic type venue of the four with their school reminiscent corridors leading to the loos. The stage is at the bottom and bars to the left and it has been expanded since my first visit there.      

I have attended five gigs there in total and that brings the total across all of Academy venues to 88.About five years ago I thought it would be an absolute shoo in to achieve the century however despite a huge increase in my gig attendance my visits to the Academies have been sporadic due to so many other competing venues constantly opening in the city.

My first visit was on 26/04/07 was to see the mercurial Marie McKee, previously lead singer of Lone Justice. There was always a hint of the diva about her, but she has the most electrifying voice. She wandered on with her backing band including her husband and early in the set launched briefly into singing acapella which was compelling. Her recent recordings had a country tint about them, and it was an enjoyable gig.

On 09/12/11 Death in Vegas were back in town for their first tour for a few years. The pubs were extremely busy with Christmas do’s in full flow.

Around the time of their two seminal albums the Contino Sessions and Scorpio Rising at the turn of the century they were an utterly absorbing live act. Unfortunately, they didn’t quite kick it that night as they concentrated heavily on their more dance-oriented material. It was a sold-out gig and it had attracted many that I would quantify in the ‘undesirable’ category.    

There was a breakdown in communication post gig which resulted in us catching the late choo-choo which I think must qualify as the busiest train I have ever encountered and as a result we were very relieved to arrive home that night.

In 2015 I witnessed the young scamps from Dundee, The View. They were in equal parts frenetic, chaotic but always engaging and ‘Superstar Tradesmen’ was as ever the highlight. There are elements of their lyrics in that track that mirror the story in my most loved Iain Banks novel ‘Espedair Street’ which relates to a rock star making it big and the corresponding impact on his childhood sweetheart. He remains my favourite author with his stunning imagination and caustic wit and it was the cruel hand of cancer that took him from us far too soon.

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Iain Banks Espedair Street novel. Image Credit Wikipedia

The following year we saw Electric Six on their annual winter tour. They had their moments, but it was a diminishing return from the startingly good impression they made the first time I witnessed them.   

My last appearance was to see the old punk stalwarts Slaughter and the Dogs from down the road in Wythenshawe, who supported Sex Pistols at their famous Lesser Free Trade Hill gig in 1976. It was unfortunately a rather limp performance from them on the night that I saw them.     

Manchester Venues 23 to 25

Situated halfway down Oldham Street next to the Dry Bar is the Mint Lounge. I have visited there six times and all those attendances have been part of a variety of multi wristband events.

It was an interesting venue as it is a basement nightclub in its normal ‘day job’ role. Upon entry you head down two flights of stairs which opens into a bar area before heading through the stage. The loos are an adventure as to access the Gents you walk through the Ladies which I am sure will have generated some interesting banter in the past.

My first visit was to see Mimas on 19/10/14 who were a decent Danish post rock band. The following year we went to see the highly touted Kirin Leonard who Marc Reilly had been extolling. Now maybe we missed something but the three of us in attendance were significantly underwhelmed and we scampered off after 3-4 songs to watch something more enjoyable.

In May 2016 I saw Will Joseph Cook, a pop artist from Tunbridge Wells. Later that year we ensured we were in situ to catch a full set by PSYBLINGS. At a previous event I had only caught a couple of tracks. They were in the garage rock genre and they terrific and exuded so much energy into their performance. We had a parlay with them afterwards and they were lovely down to earth lads.

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PSYBLINGS. Image Credit emergingindiebands.com

A couple of years after I saw Joel Baker from Nottingham and my final attendance was to see Alice Jemima, a singer songwriter from Devon.

Further down Oldham Street is the Central Methodist Hall and this venue was for a couple of years the ticket distribution point for the Dot to Dot Festival. At the 2016 Dot to Dot festival myself and Dave Keane were endeavouring to snare all the twenty venues on the roster for that day.

We landed at the venue at some point in the evening to find them having major sound issues. We headed off to tick off a couple more venues and returned about half an hour later to find the situation unchanged. Thinking that our fates were sealed regarding our quest to complete the ‘Full Monty’ of venues, we hung around for 10 minutes.

Then unexpectedly the scheduled act Laureen Aquilina, a singer from Bristol, took to the stage and announced due to the evident constraints she was going to sing acapella. A commendably brave move but by jove she pulled it off with aplomb as she had a superb strong voice.

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Lauren Aquilina. Image Credit Genius

Ticking this venue off enabled us to head off to the final venue Texture. This is a late bar located on Lever Street with a ground floor space and a balcony vantage point. The band in question were called Blooms.

I have been to the venue a couple of other times to see Speak Galactic, a lo fi band from Sweden formed by Owen Thomas, who formerly lived in Brighton. The other being Rev Rev Rev, an Italian shoegaze band who I had high hopes for but unfortunately, they just weren’t loud enough and struggled against the annoying backdrop of chatter in the room.