Nottingham Venues 6 to 8

Junktion 7 was a venue located on Canning Circus. Its initial incarnation was a flagship Home Ales pub The Royal George, then an Irish bar the Shillelagh prior to opening as a music venue for the period from 2002 to 2008. It then reopened as Seven prior to closing for good in 2011 and was demolished to build student property in 2016.

For a music venue, it was reasonably plush with polished floors, solid oak tables and a throwback table top Space invaders machine.

I attended two gigs there in that period, the first on 23/04/05 to see Sound Explosion supported by Swarm. The headline band were a garage rock band from the North East who were whirling dervishes and created a thunderous racket. I recall the guitarist somehow managing to perch himself on the bar whilst continuing to play on regardless, they were great fun.

I thought they had potential to progress but disappointingly disappeared without a trace shortly after.

My other visit was on my brothers 40th birthday with Gill in tow. He had a party in the early evening with far too much jazz playing for my liking and so we headed out for something hopefully more raucous.

We saw two local bands, Lo Ego and the Drapes. The main band had been touted beforehand but they left little impression on me. They broke up in 2008 and the lead singer Martin Collins subsequently converted his career to a different direction as a stand-up comedian.  

The Old Angel on Stoney Street in the Lace Market is a Grade 2 listed building dating back to the 1600’s. It has an interesting history as it was the site of two murders, a policeman and a prostitute in the 1700’s and it is said to be still haunted by the young prostitute. It was previously both a brothel and a chapel and deep below the pub, beyond the beer cellars lie caves in the shape of a crucifix.

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Nottingham Old Angel. Image Credit Nottingham Post

The old chapel upstairs with its double height ceiling with dark walls was the gig venue and it could get rather tropical up there. The musical palate of the venue modelled itself down the ear bashing metal and punk rock lines. It was a friendly though slightly weather-beaten pub with three separate rooms downstairs.  

My first gig there on 17/06/07 was to see Ordo Ab Chao but they were outshone by the support band, the delightfully named the Smears. They are a female trio punk band from Nottingham, and they were terrific fun.

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The Smears. Image Credit punkglobe.com

I saw Itchy Arris there in 2009 and I also saw a band called Meinhof on 31/08/13. At the second named gig there was only in the main family and friends in attendance. Thus, when they asked who in the crowd did not know the band, I was the only punter to raise my hand, so they dedicated the next song to me!  

On a random night out in October 2014 we gravitated to the pub and there was a fabulous local punk band called X Rays playing in The Old Angel downstairs bar. They were about in the mid 90’s and reformed in 2013. It was 100 miles an hour clean sounding punk, reminding me of Black Flag and they were outstanding.

The pub changed direction again in 2017 when it created its own microbrewery and rebadged itself as a gastropub.  

Nottingham Venues 4 and 5

When my brother was living near Forest Fields there was a quintessentially battered boozer at the end of his road. So, situated at 169A Noel St, Hyson Green was the Frog and Onion. In true Rovers Return style, it was contained within a residential area and resided naturally on a street corner.

It was also beneficially right opposite Beaconsfield Street tram stop so was regularly visited after a night in town as the place never seemed to close, thus a night didn’t end until the Frog and Onion had been visited!

It was a large pub with all components of human life and society contained within. You had seasoned drinkers, blokes playing crib and dominoes in the corner, Sky Sports on, semi outdoor lavatories, fruit machine and a separate pool room that was barely big enough to contain the table.

They had reasonable beer on and occasionally edible patties on sale at the bar. It wasn’t by any stretch of imagination my favourite pub, but it had a comforting community presence as it felt like it was a step back into the 1980’s.

The pub clung on for many years always looking like it was on its last legs but then I am led to believe did finally bite the dust in late 2015.

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Frog and Onion Public House. Image Credit WordPress.com

They sporadically had live acts there and we managed to catch Harry and the Last Pedestrians on New Year’s Eve 2006. The core of the band is Harry Stephenson, signed to Stiff Records in the 70’s (now a local painter and decorator) and Wayne D Evans who combined with other members to create a highly competent blues-based band. The years of expertise and experience shone through as these kids could really play.

They came on about 10.30, did a set to 11.45, closed the bar to give the staff a break to celebrate and bring the new year in and reconvened for a second set at 12.15 which completed an enjoyable evening.  

A further five minutes’ walk away from there into a more industrial area lies the Lion Inn at Basford. Again, it is conveniently located next to a tram stop but it is in a slightly sparse location in the shadow of the Shipstone’s brewery and you would probably need prior knowledge of its existence to find it.

It is a cracking homely real ale pub with normally about 10 different beers on at one time and they commendably promote a lot of local brews. There is a small beer garden at the side for sunny days and they hosted an enjoyable quiz night on Sundays which we attended a couple of times. They also had some tasty bar snacks.   

On the musical front they had a rehearsal room upstairs and a decent size stage in the main bar. I attended five gigs there in total.  

They had live bands performing there between Wednesday and Sunday and within the regular Sunday afternoon gigs I saw the afore mentioned Harry and the Last Pedestrians twice in 2005 and 2010. I also saw a covers band called Toasted Frog there on 09/04/11 who I think were a spin off from the above band.

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Harry and the Last Pedestrians on stage in the Lion. Image Credit yetiboyrecords.com

The remaining two gigs were fairly unmemorable sets from local bands Scoobies in 2009 and Midnight Pumpkin Trucks in 2011.