Nottingham Venues 24 to 25

The Rescue Rooms are located on Goldsmith St nearby Nottingham Trent University. The venue opened in 2003 and consists of two separate rooms, to the left is the bar area and the long thin gig room is on the right with a current capacity of 450. I have witnessed three gigs in total there.

On 05/07/08 we headed there for a local band showcase night. First on stage were Love Ends Disaster! who formed at Loughborough University who were followed by My Accident Captain. O Lovely Lie featuring siblings Gemma and Rich Upton were on next and created a fine wall of sound. The main band were Lo Ego who subsequently broke up later that year.

On 06/04/12 we went to see the legendary Flipper who shamefully prior to the gig had never appeared on my radar. They formed in the Californian punk scene in 1979 and like many bands they been through various break ups and different incarnations. They were unpopular in those early days as they played a version of slowed down punk in direct contrast to the speedier hardcore brand which was more prevalent at that time. They were touted as a major influence on Nirvana resulting in their former bassist Chris Novoselic playing with them in the 2000’s.

They were terrific live and the sludgiest band I have ever seen (in a good way!) and it reminded me of early Stooges material, I am just glad I got the chance to see them once in my lifetime. They were supported by local band Grey Hairs.

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Flipper. Image Credit Discogs

My first visit there on 24/08/06 was to see the Vines from Sydney, Australia. They formed in 1994 and I first picked up on them via their excellent debut album Highly Evolved. I have always quantified them in the garage rock category.

A couple of years earlier it had looked somewhat unlikely that the band would ever tour again because the lead singer Craig Nicholls had been diagnosed with Asperger’s syndrome. Unexpectedly then this tour was announced so we grabbed a ticket for the sold-out gig.

They produced a superb set and they had five or six standout tracks with my favourite being ‘Outtatheway!’ with its crackling intro and gradually building crescendo, it is an archetypal sweaty mosh pit song and I naturally answered the call to arms in that regard!

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The Vines. Image Credit Fanpop

The touted support band was the View who the organisers rather cheekily moved to the next-door venue Stealth to play their set after the Vines had completed theirs. To continue on the cheek angle, they tried to additionally charge us but we blagged our way into the venue.  

Stealth was a rather soulless metallic nightclub with a tiny stage for the band, though in their defence they did play Billy Bragg’s ‘New England’ at immense volume, which sounded fresh as a daisy that night!

It was a very early tour for the Dundee boys and the first time I had witnessed them, and their chaotic stagecraft and indecipherable Scottish brogue was an interesting sight. They attracted a boisterous enthusiastic audience. It had been a long evening so we bailed about halfway through their set but vowed I would endeavour to catch them again at a yet unspecified later date, and I was true to that pledge!

Nottingham Venues 19 to 23

The Malt Cross is located on James Street and has a long history, originally being built in 1877 and remains one of the few Victorian music halls still standing. As a result, it is a grand old venue and in November 2008 become my 100th different venue.

It has an unusual layout with bands playing on a split-level stage. The Shakes were a Nottingham based covers band playing a suite of soul tracks.

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The Malt and Cross where the split level stage is visible. Image Credit godine.co.uk

Based in the centre of Hockley is the Jam Café, which is a 100% independent bar with craft beer on tap. I first visited in 2009 and first on the bill on a little stage in the corner was Burly Nagasaki, a local rock and roll duo comprising of Joey Chickesnkin and Theresa Wrigley. They played quirky diverse stuff and they were very humorous and hugely enjoyable.

Theresa then joined her other band Fists on stage where the five-piece brewed up an entertaining scuzzy grunge sound. The headliners were a folk combo called Bonsai Projects.

My other attendance there was four years later to see a local singer Alex Taylor, not unfortunately the former lead singer of the fabulous shoegazing C86 legends Shop Assistants, whose ‘Safety Net’ single remains one of the loudest recorded singles I have ever heard!     

One of our regular watering holes was the Golden Fleece down on Mansfield Road. An old-fashioned boozer with some fine ales on draught and we have frequented a couple of Thursday night quizzes there. I recall they also had a glass walkway in the main bar which provides a peering point down to the beer cellar far below, in the same style as the one viewing the old well in the Plau pub in Preston.

We saw a couple of acoustic events there in 2011, the first being Kurt Martinez and the second being a band called the Seas of Mark.

On Goldsmith St was Spanky Van Dykes which loosely badged itself as an eatery and a funhouse. There was a gig venue upstairs and on our one visit in 2011 I thought instantly the place had a good vibe about it. The venue subsequently closed in 2017.

We saw a band called the Velotones who created a superb swirly guitar sound and I thought they had potential, however I have just undertaken a search for them and cannot find any recorded material by them, so I would have to place them in the lost gem category.

Nottingham Castle situated on Castle Rock (there is a fine local brewery of that name!) was built in 1068, commissioned by William the Conqueror a couple of years after the Battle of Hastings. It was largely demolished in 1651 and only partial elements remain.

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Nottingham Castle. Image Credit castlesfortsbattles.co.uk

On 14/10/11 we decided to attend a huge beer festival on the site where they had over 1000 beers on tap. We really couldn’t drink them all, so we undertook a small sample size on them a rather cold Friday afternoon.   

Whilst we in attendance there were a couple of bands called Booba Dust and Toe Tappers tinkling away in the background. It turned out to be my 350th gig.