Preston Venue 18 Adelphi – Part 1

Situated at the bottom of Adelphi St facing the main roundabout into town stands the Adelphi public house. Due to its very close proximity to the University, it has always been one of the main student haunts. To the right lies the ever-expanding Fylde St campus where I undertook a 2-year night school BTEC Statistics course in the mid 90’s. The pub for many years was next door to a couple of Civil Service offices, one of them Caspar House, I forget the other building name, and both have long since been flattened.

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Adelphi roundabout in the 1960’s with the pub to the right and Caspar House to the left. Image Credit flickr.

Crossing the roundabout was a hazardous occupation until they discovered student’s inability to follow the Green Cross Code and vastly improved the crossing points. Back in the day, when pubs were more closely affiliated to breweries the Adelphi was linked to Bass Brewery. Being a real ale snob at that juncture, I avoided the place as it served Stones which in my view was the absolute nadir of beers. It did gradually improve on that front and now has a couple of real ales on tap, I also had a spate of supping a few sherbets of Caffrey’s in there when that was all the rage.

It has always been a traditional open plan student pub with pool tables and a plethora of TV’s showing wall to wall sport and looks inviting from the outside. Always a decent place to watch a match, I recall England losing on penalties (quelle surprise!) to Portugal in the Quarter Finals of the 2004 Euros. They also used to have the best fruit machine in the world, a Doctor Who version which seem to regularly pay out with gay abandon. It remains a good meeting for a post-match pint when I am back over in Preston.

To the right of the bar was a doorway taking you to the upstairs bar which was originally a lounge room before incorporating a small stage and starting to showcase bands in the early 90’s. It was a small cosy venue with a mini bar at the back and the capacity could not have exceeded 250.

The Adelphi pub today. Image Credit Yell.

I regretfully missed a very early performance from Mogwai there. They had just started to appear on my radar, and I used to scour the NME on its Wednesday publication and in one week around 1997 I saw a Mogwai live review at the Adelphi from the week before, a hefty donation to the swear box followed that discovery! To improve my mood, I discovered later that John Dewhurst and Jez Catlow had been in attendance, still waiting for that call John!

Their personal reviews said that in such a small setting and with a low roof that the sound system could not cope with the sonic noise and as a result it was not the best gig and I can personally testify that a more spacious environment only serves to enhance their performance.

Preston Venues 15 to 17

On the corner of Friargate and the Ring Road, opposite the Wetherspoons is the Olde Black Bull. It is not to be confused with other hostelries named Black Bull in Preston, ones at Fulwood, Longton and Penwortham spring to mind.

Back in the glory days of Boddingtons beer it was one of their archetypal spit and sawdust Bodds brewery houses, many such as the Theatre, Selbourne and the Greyhound have now bitten the dust. I have spent many nights in there, quite often for a last drink before the last bus. Stan ran the pub for years and they extended the pub into the unit next door at some point in the 90’s.

It was a good pub to watch football and a couple of matches that stand out was a 9-man North End beating Birmingham 2-1 to deny them promotion on that day in 2009. The other watching and thoroughly enjoying Croatia batter Germany 3-0 in the 1998 World Cup quarter final.

They had regular bands in the corner of the pub. My first gig there was an old school blues band Wayne Carrick band on 16/02/13. On 01/07/17 I saw local duo Tom Biddle band and my final gig there was Barbarazella later in 2017.

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Olde Black Bull pub. Image Credit Flickr

About 5 doorways down Friargate lies the Dog and Partridge, next to the Zagros takeaway.The pub has a long history going back to the 1700’s. Back in the 1980’s when drink driving was more prevalent the hostelry was a magnet for bikers with a swathe of Harleys and Suzuki’s parked up outside.   

With that ‘Easy Rider’ affiliation the music slant is somewhat understandingly in the rock/punk rock genre. The music stage has had a couple of spots but always in the right-hand room adjacent to the bar.

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The spruced up Dog and Partridge pub. Image Credit Flickr.

I first saw a band there on 24/07/11 who in my annals are listed somewhat mysteriously as Sheffield Steam Punk. The following year I saw a punk rock band from Lancaster called Mitford Rebel.

On the 05/05/13 I caught a noisy set from Preston’s finest evergreen punks Pike. A year later another punk band the Pink Tornados were in residence. The following year I saw Marauders, a blues covers band and Havoc 51, a rock band from Warrington.

My final three attendances were to see Vented Fury, Molly Chambers (from Blackpool) and a band called Gin Pit who did thunderously loud shambolic cover versions.

On the other side of the roundabout near the University building you will find the Ship (latterly the Ship and Giggles). Due to their location it has always first and foremost a student establishment. They had a brief moment of fame recently by offering substantial meals for a £0.01 to ensure they could stay open during Tier 3, but no doubt conceivably at a loss due to those margins.

I have witnessed five gigs there. At the back end of 2009 I saw a mate’s goth band Heavy Fluid Addicts. The following year I saw a Wirral based covers band called Insanity Beach.

I have also seen an energetic ska punk band from Derby called Addictive Philosophy. The remaining two gigs were a band called Mad Dog and a singer songwriter called Kim Waller.