Manchester Venue 31 – Night and Day Part 1

Firmly ensconced in my Top 5 Manchester venues is the Night and Day Café situated halfway down Oldham Street, next to the Dry Bar and opposite the legendary Piccadilly Records in the Northern Quarter (NQ). The venue opened originally as a chip shop in 1991 in what at the point of time was a disreputable area of town, before gradually evolving into a music venue.

The Night and Day capacity is 250 and like many small venues has served to be a launch pad for bands on the ladder up to much larger venues. Local band Elbow were a mainstay in their early days and to support the venue in the current pandemic are scheduled to play a Back to the Roots gig there later this year.  

It is recognised as the first real seminal gig venue in NQ and a forerunner on which the whole area was rebuilt upon. This has resulted in the present-day position where there is a tsunami of small independent venues and bars located in the streets and byways adjacent to the venue.

See the source image
Manchester Night and Day venue. Image Credit blog.ticketweb.co.uk

Despite the venue being a mainstay in the area for 30 years, some punter in 2013 moved into the flats above the venue and then inexplicably had the temerity to complain about the decibel levels. A petition with 74,000 signatures was raised in support of the venue and thankfully the council saw sense and only applied some conditions to have a complaints log and set up ongoing quarterly meetings with nearby residents.     

It has a fine geographical location with a 15-minute jaunt to either Piccadilly or Victoria stations to catch the last train home.  

The Night and Day lives up to its name and operates as a café during the day with continental tables outside to watch the comings and goings. It then has an hour crossover period early evening and morphs into a paid gig venue at night.

The set-up is a long thin room with a long bar on the left, DJ stand to the right and the stage down at the bottom. It is a very intimate setting where you can stand right up front though you must carefully navigate the wooden pillars. Alternatively, you can even have the unusual vantage of being up close and personal at the left-hand side of the stage which then leads onwards to the downstairs loos.

There are certain places where I have developed traditions on the drink fronts, any pub up in Kirkcudbright in Scotland (base for Wickerman Festivals) generally incites a Guinness and Raiders nightclub in Preston for many years had Murphy’s Stout as the drink of choice. For Night and Day however, it has always been a cold bottle of Budvar!  

Image result for Budvar Bottle. Size: 204 x 204. Source: www.drinksupermarket.com
A cheeky Budvar! Image Credit www.drinksupermarket.com

I have attended 17 gigs there in totality, placing it at No 7 on my most visited venue list. Ten of those gigs were attended either by blagging our way in following other gigs prior to the last train or part of multi event festivals such as Carefully Planned, Dot to Dot or Off the Record. Quite often it was deliberately the last venue of the night as it is always a cracking place to finish in!

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.

See the source image
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.

See the source image
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.