Manchester Venue 4 – Boardwalk

The Boardwalk was a small venue (capacity initially about 250 before increasing to 400) in an industrial area on Little Peter St behind Deansgate station. It was a stone’s throw from the Hacienda and was a fine venue between 1984 and 1999. It doubled up as a recording space and Oasis played their first ever gig on 18/08/91.

You went up some narrow steps to the main room with a bar on the left and I recall it was a very warm venue.

Picture of John Robb, journalist and lead singer of Membranes and Goldblade, who despite being a Blackpool FC fan is a genuinely good bloke. Image Credit mdm.archive.co.uk

Between 18/06/1987 and 09/10/1992 I attended five gigs there. The first being a very early fine gig by the Proclaimers supported by the Rhythm Sisters. They came on at 11pm with late stage times being a regular occurrence and they played the whole first album and then ran out of songs so played the first track again.

The second gig on the 18/07/87 was a proper event. On John Peel’s show on the Wednesday it was referenced that the legendary Big Black were playing their final ever British dates, the penultimate one being on the Saturday. I put a call into Piccadilly Records box office on the Thursday morning and was informed there were a handful of tickets and asked them to save me two which we agreed would be picked up in person on Saturday afternoon, but upon arrival we were informed that there had been an oversight and the gig was now sold out. Hope extinguished one might think, however there was a chink of light as we were informed that the venue always held 50 tickets back. So off we trotted and we were the first in the queue at 8pm to obtain said tickets. I recall a minibus arriving from Crewe with the aspiration of garnering some tickets.

Pubs were then visited in celebration and we returned to catch the support band Death by Milk Float. Big Black themselves were an intense slightly unsettling experience with their industrial noise, at one point in their enthusiasm the crowd pulled lead singer Steve Albini into the moshpit, causing a 10 minute delay. They were thoroughly worth the ticket palaver to witness them before the band disbanded, ‘Kerosene’ was outstanding. We returned home to watch a recording of Steven Roche wrap up the Tour De France which he won the next day.

Steve Albini of Big Black on stage. Image Credit blogspot.com

The third gig the following year was a band called Pussy Galore who were not that memorable.

The fourth in Sept 89 was Firehose supported again bizarrely by Death by Milk Float. My now wife Gill was studying in Crewe at the time and one of the ticket outlets was located in a record shop there. So on a weekend visit I scamped in to purchase some tickets completing the full circle of the Crewe/Boardwalk link. Firehose appeared out of the original band Minutemen after the untimely death of their lead singer D Boon in a car crash. A chap called EdFromOhio made an approach and encouraged the band to reform with him stepping in as lead singer.

When they came on stage we realised that we had unwittingly being sat near them in the Briton’s Protection pre-gig (very limited band photos available pre-internet to know what people looked like). They were a terrific live act and for some inexplicable reason I wandered into their dressing room and said hello to Ed who walked off without a word which I took as my cue to curb my interloping activities and go home!    

My final appearance at the Boardwalk was to watch Sugar supported by Venus Beads on 09/10/92. Sugar was ex Husker Du Bob Mould’s new band which finally brought him some much deserved critical acclaim. They produced a thunderous set which was a suitable epitaph to a sorely missed venue.

Manchester Venue 3 – International 2

Running as a sister venue and located nearby International 1 was the slighter larger International 2 (also closed I believe early 90’s). There were rumours of ongoing drug incidents that precipitated its demise. It was a grander venue than International 1 as it had a upper balcony overlooking the stage where I recall supping Newcastle Brown prior to the gigs.

Photograph of the venue which became the International 2 on Plymouth Grove, Longsight. The photo was taken in 1975 as its previous incarnation as the Carousel Club, a venue favoured by the local Irish community. Image Credit mdmarchive.co.uk

I visited there twice and my first visit  on a very cold Monday night in December 1986 is still up there as one of my favourite all time gigs. The Pogues were in town and at that point they were at their absolute peak. I have never witnessed a more interactive audience as I would estimate around 80% of the crowd were dancing and an old fashioned sprung dance floor assisted in this regard. In the middle of the gig we had a loo break which were situated out the back of the venue and walking back up we encountered the largest drunkest moshpit I have ever witnessed. The band had a euphoric stage presence and Shane McGowan had a plethora of different forms of alcohol by his feet including what looked suspiciously like a bottle of Crème de Menthe.

Stand out tracks were ‘Sick Bed of Cuchulainn’ and ‘A Pair of Brown Eyes’ and they finished their second encore with ‘The Wild Rover’.

Even the DJ was inspired, spinning the Buzzcocks ‘Ever Fallen in Love’ as the first track post gig.  

Flyer displaying Pogues gig. Image Credit mdm.archive.co.uk

The night took a surreal turn afterwards as we piled into a restaurant next to Yang Sing for some tucker and in the middle of our meal a considerable ruckus ensued. Two Chinese lads proceeded to turn on another highly unfortunate Chinese lad with chairs and tables upturned. After a summary lesson had been taught (reason unknown) the assailants calmly landed a substantial amount of cash on the counter for damages on their way out followed shortly after by the battered and bruised victim.  We exchanged bemused glances, made sure he was ok and then returned to our supper.  

The other gig at the venue was Jesus and Mary Chain supported by Motorcycle Boy (led by Alex who was previously in the Shop Assistants). Mary Chain were decent that night finishing their set with ‘Kill Surf City’ and ‘Never Understand’. My records show I bought a band T-shirt for a bargain £4 which lasted for an exceedingly long time before disintegrating!

The venue was owned by Gareth Evans who also doubled up as the Stone Roses manager. The venue is sighted in the first few seconds of the promotional video for ‘Sally Cinnamon’.