Manchester Venue 57 to 59 Sound Control – Part 1

If you turn right at the base of the Manchester Oxford train station steps and go past the Thirsty Scholar pub you would find the Sound Control music venue. It was in a brilliant location with easy access to the station and surrounded by a plethora of adjacent boozers.

My friend Ellie Goodman, now Ramsbottom’s finest was a huge aficionado of this venue, and she is evidently an outstanding judge of character as it remains one of my Top 5 favourite Manchester venues. The venue opened on 16/12/09 and despite many great bands crossing the threshold it sadly closed exactly eight years later on 16/12/17, the final night being a celebratory Oasis disco. It has since been demolished with the intention of building student flats.

One regret was missing the timeless Buffalo Tom when they played there one Friday night as it was announced a couple of days after I had booked a weekend away, despite that fact that I have seen them before it was a real shame as they rarely hit these shores nowadays!

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Sound Control venue. Image Credit northernnoise.co.uk

The venue consisted of three main areas, the initial being the Sound Control Bar which you accessed instantly on entering the venue. Its primary function was obviously to purchase beverages but also very occasionally the 150-capacity area doubled up as a music room. In 2013, within the remit of the excellent Dot to Dot festival, I saw a decent acoustic singer called Sam Bradley, who was from London but had spent part of his childhood soaking up the diverse musical influences of Nashville.  

At the same festival in 2013 I discovered for the first time that there was also the Sound Control Basement Club complete with stage and a decent capacity of 350.  The band I saw was Satellite Stories but that is only half the story though as reading about them now, they were cited at the time as the most universally popular indie group from Finland and received considerable press acclaim.

They were also remarkably recorded as the second most blogged artist in the World in August 2012. Much to my shame, or not as the case may be, I can barely remember anything about them apart from them having a clean accomplished poppy sound, it looks like the band disbanded in 2018. I have noted also that this was my 50th different venue in Manchester.

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Satellite Stories promo picture. Image Credit weallwantsomeone.org

Dot to Dot is unfortunately not taking place in Manchester this year, but hopefully they will be reintroduced to the roster next year alongside their Nottingham and Bristol counterparts.

From the bar there were a choice of staircases up to the Sound Control Music Room, where you could always garner a decent vantage point and a large dancefloor made it a stellar mosh pit venue.

My first attendance there on 06/02/10 was in the end an aborted gig due to a combination of circumstances. There was a highly touted double bill of upcoming bands The Drums and Surfer Blood. Both bands had performed at the Academy that evening and as Sound Control was the second gig of the night, all the stage times got pushed back.

We arrived at the upstairs venue, liking it instantly and punters were waiting patiently for the support act, but rather oddly in the format of a school disco by all being stood backed against the outer walls with nobody brave enough to venture forward to the stage!

Further conspiring against a successful gig-going evening was the fact that at this point in time on Saturday nights the last train turned into an interminable bus, so we were forced to catch the earlier 10.30 train. The band unfortunately did not appear before our departure time, so we did even not hear a note, a very odd night and to complete the sorry tale, I have never managed to see either band in a live setting since.

Manchester Venues 50 and 51

Now, I have endeavoured where possible to review all the venues in a chronological order, but I must say I had to check back in the Jimmy archives to ascertain which was my 50th venue in Manchester. It transpires that it is Joshua Brooks which is a pub on Princess St opposite the Garratt pub and on the adjacent corner to the FAC251 venue, located in the old Factory Records, a place I have not yet managed to visit.

When I checked back at the nomenclature for the venue, I unearthed that Joshua Brookes (JB) was an Anglican chaplain born in Cheadle Hulme in 1754 and seemed an unremarkable chap apart from the fact that his father was nicknamed Pontius Pilate by the virtue of his violent temper.

JB is portrayed in a Mrs Linnaeus Banks novel The Manchester Man that follows the life of a Manchester resident, Jabez Clegg who also had a public house on Oxford Road named after him. There is also a quotation from that novel that forms the epitaph on the tombstone of Factory Records founder Tony Wilson. 

    

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Joshua Brooks pub. Image Credit foodanddrinkguides.co.uk

The pub opened in 1993 and has a ground floor craft ale bar with a small music space downstairs which lays claim to being the Chemical Brothers first ever residency when they were at the University in the city.

My first visit was on 24/05/13 as the night’s last venue at the Dot-to-Dot festival prior to catching the late train at Piccadilly Station. The band in question was Story Books but to be fair, they weren’t particularly memorable though I did remember them saying they had undertaken a hellish journey traffic wise from somewhere down South and just arrived in time for their 11.30 pm slot.

My second and final musical encounter was prior to an Arab Strap gig at the Ritz when we heard a local synth band called DENOVA playing, and we managed to catch a portion of their performance.  

My personal choice of site for buying gigs tickets is ENTS24 as I have always found them very reliable and infinitely less corporate than Ticketmaster. Alongside their ticket distribution they regularly list unusual venues that you tend not to find on other sites. Thus, every time I attend a gig, I always have a gander to see if there is a sister event the same evening.

So, on 30/10/11 prior to a F%**$d Up gig at Sound Control we headed to an innocuous looking unit near the Oxford Road end of Charles St, opposite the new Circle Square development. It looked like a generic office space but when you headed down the stairs to the Base Bar you entered an Aladdin’s cave of an all-day punk event. It seemed to be a very short-lived venue as I never saw any other events listed there, but it was a privilege to attend something that resembled a hidden guerrilla gig.   

Annoyingly the last band had just finished their set, so we camped at the bar and the next band up were a local four-piece called Dangerous Aces who were a very high-octane punk band, and they were fabulous fun. The other band we witnessed was a long-standing group from Macclesfield called Kirkz. We bade our farewell but what an interesting noisy interlude it had provided!

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Dangerous Aces debut album Deny all Responsibility. Image Credit collective-zine.co.uk