Preston Venues 8 and 9

Just behind Preston prison, on Ribbleton Lane was the Preston TUC Club (also known as the Ribdale Club). It was a scruffy slightly battered venue with a decent sized gig room on the left-hand side of the building.

My first visit was in 1985 on a Thursday night with the band in question being the Food Scientists. They had some truly suspect barbecued beans with baked potatoes on sale which I really should not have purchased. The band were instantly forgettable and did a short set allowing me to jump on the 11.15 bus home.

My other visit was on another Thursday 10/12/87 to see Chumbawumba. Astonishingly there were five gigs on in Preston that night, a true tsunami of music and a feat possibly never repeated. They included Tank at the Guild Hall and Frank Sidebottom at London Road Labour Club, I cannot recall the other two events.

There was a group of us out and we also ran into Tony Dewhurst in the Greyhound prior to them going to the Frank Sidebottom gig. I headed to the other gig on my lonesome before catching up with John Dewhurst inside the venue.

We witnessed a couple of supports prior to the main band coming on at 10.30. This was prior to their ‘Tubthumping’ 15 minutes of fame period. There was about 10 of them in the band and they very interactive, anarchic and overtly political, creating a vibrant moshpit.

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Chumbawumba promo pic. Image Credit last.fm

They did one song in the style of Dylan’s ‘Subterranean Homesick Blues’ with the discarding of the placards and encored with an acapella version of ‘The Diggers’ for which Billy Bragg had previously performed a cover. They played about an hour set and were good fun overall.

Couple of years later I missed a Snuff gig there as I was recovering from a tonsillectomy. I can find no records there of any gigs into the 90’s so assuming the music part of the venue closed around then.

Down by the River (not the Neil Young track!) in Preston lie the linked Parks, Miller and Avenham Park. The latter has a natural bowl effect and we used to partake in the local tradition of rolling eggs down the hill on Easter Monday.  

Avenham Park on an Easter Monday (before my time!). Image Credit Blog Preston.

There used to be an old stage at the foot of the slope, which was utilised during the Preston Guild events which take place every 20 years (in place since 1179) and this venue was used extensively in the 1992 event. The stage has long now and there is a café and tourist information where it once stood.

I saw four different gigs there over the years. The first being a short impromptu one when traversing the park on the way to another gig in town after a couple of bevies in the Continental pub. This was on 31/05/92 and we caught a portion of Jools Holland and Rhythm and Blues band’s set.

I witnessed two local bands events, the first in July 2000 witnessing Lorane, Bridge and Cujo and the second was on 26/07/03 to see sets by Gotukola, Free Parking, Idiom Lifeline and Neocoma.   

Between 1994 and 1996 Gill and I lived on a flat off Fishergate Hill which was 5 minutes-walk from the park and remarkably a free Heineken Festival was scheduled to take place there.

We headed down on a Saturday in June 1994 and were chatting to a couple of friends whilst a young bunch of upstarts from South Manchester called Oasis were playing in the tent about 100 yards away – I can claim I heard them at least!

We now live within 5 minutes’ walk to where the Gallagher boys grew up and the record shop they frequented and my pal Marcus lives opposite the house where the Definitely Maybe album cover picture was taken

I am sure I saw more than one band that day but did not record the details so the only one I definitely clocked was a superb set from Boo Radleys. The fact that I could witness such a fine band for free on my doorstep was a rare boon. Their best track was ‘Lazarus’.  

The festival continued the following year but with a significantly more commercial slant with Spice Girls playing. I decided to swerve that one and reminisce on the previous year’s show!

I appreciate this is a first world problem, but today marks 100 days since my last gig, my longest gap between gigs since 1994. I am hoping and praying that all these venues, especially the smaller ones  survive the pandemic.

Wigan Gigs

A ten-minute train ride (or 25 minutes if it is a Northern bone rattler) from Preston lies the town of Wigan where they are partial to an odd pie or two! I have a lot of time for Wiganers as I have always found them to be down to earth fair minded folk. There is a plethora of bars in the town centre with a renowned strip of bars for the younger clientele down King St.

When North End were at their lowest ebb at the bottom of the old Fourth Division, I took part in a sponsored walk to Wigan’s old Springfield Park ground (17 miles) to raise money for the club. Thankfully it stayed dry en-route but in typical fashion it was a followed by a woeful game and the obligatory defeat.

Wigan has not been a regular gig going place for me, only racking up 4 gigs in total across the years. My first gig was on a Friday night 11/09/87. Whilst listening to John Peel a couple of nights before I became aware of a gig at Wigan Den.

A little bit of detective work was required to locate the venue and it turned out to be on Melverley St very near the famous old Northern Soul venue at Wigan Casino and the bus station. NOFX, Pitchshifter and Frank Sidebottom graced the venue around that time.

We headed in about 9pm and it was a social club layout with bands on one side containing a small stage, a little bar and a pool table. First up was Fflapps with a female lead vocalist, they left little impression on me.

They were followed by Electro Hippies, a decent 3-piece trashcore band from the Wigan area who had a degree of comedic value within their set by playing a one second song called ‘Mega Armageddon Part 4’ in a similar vein to the ‘All’ track penned by the Descendants.  The band were short lived and split in 1989.  

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Electro Hippies album cover. Image Credit darkabyss.org

There was a limited choice of alcohol beverages in the establishment and I was endeavouring to drink a can of Kestrel Super Strength 1084 which was too close to liquid ethanol for my liking. The main band was Anhrefn from Welshpool who sang in Welsh for the full set. The driving force was Rhys Mwyn who set up his own record label to ensure their songs were heard, he went off to manage Catatonia for their first two singles.  

It was 20 years before my next appearance at Wigan Tavern on Mesnes Street on 15/02/08. It was about 10 minutes walk from the station with the venue above a pub. The support was the Sugars and the main act was the Von Bondies from Detroit who emerged at the same time as the White Stripes. I recall it was a high stage and they were thumpingly loud and thoroughly enjoyable. It was all very smooth sailing transport wise as the end of their set coincided with us making the last train home at midnight.  

Returning to Wigan a couple of years later after a trip to Southport we located a Thai restaurant which I belatedly realised was on the site of the Tavern venue and our table was on the old stage!

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Von Bondies live. Image credit blogspot.com

My third trip was to see Honeyblood at the Museum of Life on 06/05/17 which was part of the Library sponsored gigs initiative. It was located at the bottom of King St and was a cracking setting. They are a two-piece female Glaswegian combo. I thought prior to the gig based on recorded output that they may be a tad one dimensional, but they proved me wrong on that point as they were excellent and had good stage personas.  

https://www.wigan.gov.uk/Resident/Museums-archives/Museum-of-Wigan-Life/index.aspx

My final trip on 28/07/17 was to see Bad Manners at the Old Courts, again nearby the station. It was a very rainy Friday night (not in Soho!). Capacity was probably about 250 and was a decent venue. They were good and lead singer Buster Bloodvessel was as mad cap as ever. There was certainly some dodgy but enthusiastic ska dancing from our crew!

https://www.theoldcourts.com/