Manchester Venue 83 – Etihad Stadium

Nearby where we live now in south Manchester is the Fallowfield Loop which is an off-road cycling, walking and horse-riding path. It traverses the eight-mile route from Chorlton Cum Hardy metro station through Fallowfield, Levenshulme, Gorton and ends at the Ashton Canal, and I have cycled it many times. 

It runs down the old ‘Manchester Central Railway’ line which closed in 1988 and the ‘Friends of the Fallowfield Loop’ were instrumental in then converting it into the cycle route you see today. It is believed to be the longest urban cycleway in Britain.

A frosty Fallowfield Loop. Image Credit flickriver.com

During the pandemic, we decided to walk the lengthy route into town because there was quite frankly nothing else to do at that time! When the path reaches the canal, you can take a left turn and a couple of miles later you find yourself at the Etihad Campus, otherwise known as Sportcity. This is part of the continuation of the ongoing development of East Manchester and there is their own distinct metro stop attached to the complex which was opened in 2013.  

Within the same area you find the national cycling velodrome where I have attended a couple of times and seen cycling’s royalty, Laura and Jason Kenny in action and continually marvel at the astonishingly steep banking they have to navigate on the track!

The Campus is owned by Manchester City football club and contains the Manchester Etihad Stadium and City football academy. I have never attended in a football capacity as our paths seldom cross and I once also missed a famous 1-0 Preston North End win at City’s old ground at Maine Road in 1998 due to having a job interview early the next day.       

Adjacent to the complex, there is a current venture jointly run between Manchester City, LA developers, and the singer Harry Styles to build a Co-op Live stadium. This will become the UK’s largest live entertainment arena with a 23.5k capacity and there are plans to have around 120 live events annually staged there.

The project has an eyewatering cost of £365m and is due to open in 2024. Whether there is scope for two huge auditoriums in the city with the Manchester Arena situated about three miles away remains to be seen, or will it subsequently result in them becoming competitors to each other?  

The Etihad Stadium was originally built to host the 2002 Commonwealth Games, the following year Manchester City made their home there and it has played host to a variety of sporting events in the intervening years. The stadium capacity is 53,400 but increases to 60,000 for gigs (by utilising the pitch area) which take place during the summer months. The first concert there was the Red Hot Chilli Peppers supported by James Brown in 2004 and in 2011 Take That played eight nights with tickets sales of over 400k for the duration.  

Manchester Etihad Stadium. Image Credit traveldigg.com

We had previously seen AC/DC twice at Manchester Arena and Glasgow Hampden Park and decided to witness them again in 2016. In between purchasing the tickets and the date of the show the lead singer Brian Johnson had to pull out with the very valid excuse of hearing loss. Remarkably he has since gone through experimental treatment to restore his hearing and is now back performing again.

It was announced that somewhat bizarrely he would be replaced by the Guns and Roses lead singer Axl Rose. Following that news, we hummed and hawed whether to claim a refund but subsequently went past the deadline, so we had no choice but to attend.

On the night Uncle George, John and Paul Dewhurst met in Monroes near Piccadilly Station for a couple of scoops before diving onto the metro. Upon alighting we were met by all the considerable food and amenities surrounding the complex and then headed up to our seats at the back of the stadium. 

Now, Axl Rose has a considerable reputation for being a prickly customer and arriving on stage at very very late hours. Thankfully, on the day he played it with a very straight bat perhaps helped in part by the fact that one of his feet was in plaster due to a recent accident. As a result of Brian’s absence AC/DC were not in the same league as previous performances but admittedly it was not as bad as I feared it could be, and they had some inspirational moments, with ‘Highway to Hell’ being a personal favourite on the night.   

There was one particular blissed out punter directly in front of us who was having the time of his life and danced throughout the whole performance. The metro was packed so we followed the crowds by walking back into the town via the canals in the regenerated area of New Islington.

We were at that point in time in advanced preparation for relocating to Manchester but had already decided on a location in the suburbs and written off moving into the city centre, which could well have been a more viable option for us if we had been twenty years younger!

Manchester Venue 59 Sound Control – Part 2

An early blog posting for you this week.

The Sound Control venue is in the perfect classic mould of being located within bumbling distance of the nearest train station. Others to fit these criteria locally are the Star and Garter (Piccadilly), Rebellion Bar (Deansgate), MEN Arena (Victoria) and Kings Arms (Salford Central).

So, much like Esha Ness’s ‘win’ in the Grand National and therefore discounting the ‘gig that never was’ outlined in the blog last week, I have attended the Sound Control Music Room a grand total of seven times.  

My first attendance was on a warm sunny June evening in 2011. On the journey over the train was extremely busy with gig goers and the reason for this significant commuter increase was that the reformed Take That were on a run of comeback dates over at the Etihad Stadium.

Our band of choice that night was the shoegaze gurus Pains of Being Pure at Heart. Now I saw this band five times in total during their career and a couple of those gigs stood out, an initial gobsmackingly fine performance in Chorlton which sat alongside this appearance as an absolute belter.

The reason that this duo of gigs succeeded was that the guitars were ramped up to 10 capturing the intended beautiful sonic fuzz that their sound clearly deserved. The set was in a good way still leaning very heavily on their astonishingly good eponymous debut record, which in my view is all killer no filler. They were supported by a local band called Raffles.  Uncle George had to scoot off prior to the end of their set as he was unfortunately on an early shift the next day, but we stayed for the duration before trekking up and catching the last train from Piccadilly.

Four months later, I saw the Canadian hardcore punks F##&£d Up who with their effervescent lead singer Pink Eyes and surging guitars certainly pack a punch. They are somewhat of an anachronism as their sound could be quantified in the category of intelligent hardcore music and they even start one album with a cheeky flute before the track morphs into something infinitely noisier!

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Pink Eyes in full flow. Image Credit Dreamstime.

Their big energetic tsunami of sound sucked me into the moshpit but that was curtailed prematurely as I toppled over, and I was proper sore and battered in the morning. Some naysayers may say moshpits should be avoided at the age of 43, but I eschew that point of view and eleven years on I will still partake if the mood takes me! Train constraints again meant we missed the tail end of the performance; a pattern was beginning to develop here at this venue.

Mainly due to the ongoing issues around enforced early departures we decided at our next attendance on 01/12/12 to grab a room for the night at Old Trafford Cricket Club, this being in the days when hotels rooms in Manchester were just about affordable, before they morphed into London prices.

The band in question was the rather terrific Raveonettes, the Danish shoegazing duo who had recently released their excellent sixth album Observator and they played a selection of tracks from said record with ‘Young and Cold’ being the highlight. It was a glacially cold night and after the gig we encountered the busiest ever metro in the whole of Christendom when commuting back to the digs.

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The Raveonettes on stage. Image Credit mxdwn.com

At the 2013 Dot to Dot event, we saw a singer songwriter called Billy Lockett from Northampton, who is a classical pianist. He was in the faux familiarity bracket that I can never warm to, in the mould of Newton Faulkner and Beans on Toast and a certain Ed Sheeran who appears to have made a career out of this genre!