Manchester Venue 31 Night and Day – Part 3

In my humble opinion the most criminally underrated band over the last 15 years is a band from Norwich called Sennen. They formed in 2002 and were named after a Ride track and have produced five excellent albums which I return to on a regular basis. They are in the post-rock Mogwai mould with a softer side and they produce hypnotic music with hushed shoegaze harmonies.

I think what has hindered them is their aversion to touring and in those 19 years of existence they have not yet totalled 150 gigs, UK Subs and Status Quo would probably hit the total in a calendar year. Prior to me becoming aware of them they played the Cellar Bar in Blackburn. I was aware of a Deaf Institute gig but couldn’t attend but in retrospect was glad I didn’t make it as it transpired, they only did a short post-midnight set.

Thus, when I heard they were playing Night and Day on Easter Monday in 2010 I ensured I would be in attendance. I recall Uncle George and I trying to find somewhere beforehand to eat in and around Rochdale Road near the Wing Yip supermarket and we ended up in a little noodle bar. The area we were scouring that night is now unrecognisable as it subsequently turned into the regentrified Ancoats area.  

Rather sadly, there cannot have been more than 20 people in the venue. Despite the band being somewhat rusty I thoroughly enjoyed their 45-minute set. I also had a parlay with them afterwards and they turned out to be genuine down to earth lads. They were supported on the night by Rarely Spun.

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Sennen. Image Credit Last FM.

The following year we saw Slaughter and the Dogs, the old punk band who formed in the local suburb of Wythenshawe. They were in very good form with a terrific crowd interaction and it was a fine gig. The night ended in chaos as we miscalculated the time and subsequently missed the last train from Victoria. This resulted in an expensive cab home on a very filthy rainy night, and I was very glad to land home that night!

In 2018, I attended a gig there with my North East correspondent Jamie Young. We had a pre gig visit to the infamous Marble Arch pub and a pizza in the Mackie Mayor food hall. The band in question was Black Delta Movement, a psychedelic garage rock outfit from Kingston Upon Hull. Regretfully, it was a disappointing set and they were outshone by the support band Mr Strange, an engaging three-piece band from Isle of Wight.  

Later that year, I went to see the Orielles from Halifax accompanied by Gill and one of the brightest people I know, Dr Laura Buckley. The bands fortunes were on the upswing at that point, but they honoured a commitment to play Night and Day which was gracious of them. They have a quirky off kilter sound but were an enjoyable watch. They were supported by a mournful downbeat set from Laetitia Sadler, who is better known as a member of Stereolab and Le Price Maori.

Saving the best to last was one of those random gigs that you very rarely encounter by catching a remarkable band at the inception of their career and you know instantly it is a privilege to be there. At the Dot to Dot festival in 2018 we happened to wander into the venue just before a very early performance from Dublin’s finest Fontaines DC.

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Fontaines DC on stage. Image Credit Irish Times

They wandered on and had a captivating presence with lead singer Grian Chatten prowling the stage like a caged tiger and the band in perfect synch behind him. They only played a 30-minute set (perfect pint supping timespan) but what a fabulous half an hour they produced. Algarve Ray was also in attendance and he looked as awestruck as me after the gig!

Manchester Venues 18 to 22

Following on from the Festival blog last week I am going to concentrate on some Dot to Dot festival venues on and around Oldham Street in the Northern Quarter that I visited at the event which took place on 28/05/16.  

COW is a two-floor vintage clothes shop on the same block of Piccadilly Records and is an archetypal shop for this area of town. From a very unusual vantage point of standing behind a clothes rack we witnessed a young Manchester acoustic artist called Miranda Amess who had a decent voice with a smidgeon of a KT Tunstall vibe about her.  It was also my 250th different venue.

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Cow clothes shop. Image Credit WordPress.com

The Black Dog Ballroom is a downstairs New York style bar situated underneath Affleck’s Palace on the corner of Tib and Church Street. I had only previously been in for a drink and a burger once before prior to another gig. The venue was behind a further door off the main room and had a little bar and stage within. We saw Love for Zero, an electro synth band from Manchester who were in the Editors mould.  

Traversing from the basement to the top floor of Affleck’s you find the Black Milk Dessert Café. The local band on stage were Bright Young People and they had a nice scuzzy Stooges crunch about them. Their debut single was produced by Ian McCulloch of Echo and the Bunnymen.  

Their performance exemplified the uniqueness of the chosen venue as the American style diner on the third floor with windows overlooking Oldham Street was in great contrast to the sturdy guitar led sound on stage.

The unassuming orange signed Koffee Pot is located at the Swan Street end of Oldham Street. It is very near the Crown and Kettle pub which unfortunately ever appeared only on a festival roster for one day when I couldn’t attend as I was ensconced at Uncle George’s 60th hootenanny, and as a result my friends Jez Catlow and Moggy have beaten me to the punch there.

We saw a three-piece garage rock band called the Slovaks and they were good value.

The Koffee Pot. Image Credit northernnoise.co.uk

I recently read that the Koffee Pot was collaborating with the reborn Deaf Institute by providing the food for the ground floor restaurant space.    

Just off Oldham St lies the 57 Thomas Street Beer House. It is one of several pubs linked to the local Marble Brewery who also have their original flagship Marble Arch pub nearby. They had some devilishly strong ales on display in the ground floor bar and the venue was situated upstairs.

The band Psyblings were a terrific five-piece psych rock combo from Warrington who had met at Manchester University. Unfortunately, we only had time for a couple of tracks, but I made a mental note of their capability and as a result ensured we caught their full set at another event the following year.  

I caught another local band called Easter at the venue later that year.  

The bar has very recently been taken over by Fierce Beer, an award-winning craft beer brewery based in Aberdeen, enabling them to open their first bar North of the border.