Manchester Venue 181 – Canvas

Dominating a 5.4 acre portion of Oxford Road for many years was the New Broadcasting House (NBH). It was the BBC regional headquarters and contained various departments including BBC Manchester, BBC Northwest, the Philharmonic orchestra and was also furnished with a 180-seat restaurant. Many TV programmes were recorded there including Question of Sport, Dragon’s Den and Red Dwarf.

The old BBC building. Image Credit g7uk.com

It was originally built in 1975 before being subsequently demolished in 2012, when lock stock and barrel everything relocated to Media City at Salford Quays. During this period one of the Kro branches (Kro 2) was located next door and served as a sister venue to the one further down the strip opposite Manchester University. I visited there many times pre and post gigs and imbibed a few cold ones in their large outdoor area. Its closure coincided with the shutting down of NBH and it is now a Tesco Express.  

The land remained sparse and derelict for many years before a new development suddenly sprung up, seemingly overnight. This has become known as the Circle Square development and encompassed within this area are student accommodations, office spaces and communal seating within the open plan Symphony Park in the central portion.

Also catered for are the highly important food and drink options, the former including Hello Oriental where I have sampled their wares a few times. The latter incorporates a Federal coffee outlet and a branch of the North Taproom brewery.  

Circle Square. Image Credit circlesquaremanchester.com

On the musical front, there is a 1000 capacity venue which has recently opened called Ambers. They are mainly a DJ based venue and have regular late events across the two function rooms.

The other venue that appeared there was Manchester Canvas which had a day and night concept. It was created by the BeSixth team who owned two established music locales in East London, namely Oval Space and Pickle Factory which are sister venues, located opposite each other in Bethnal Green. They commendably became the first two multi-use venues in the UK to eliminate single use bottles and cups, and the concept of all three establishments was to create a blank canvas experimental ethos.  

There was a ground floor cocktail bar and South American influenced restaurant and function rooms for hire and weekly yoga classes. They also launched a fairly unique membership for under 30’s costing £15 with perks such as free gigs.

The venue appeared ‘as if by magic’ on the gig listings in June 22 in much the same way that the Soup Kitchen did many years earlier, causing me to initially scratch my head regarding its actual location, but the ‘venue bloodhound’ in me soon tracked it down!

My initial interaction was visiting the bar whilst on the way to another gig. I engaged in discussion with the friendly barman regarding the new complex and he generously offered a private tour, which we readily accepted. Downstairs from the bar were two separate but interlinked rooms, the second complete with comfy sofas and a balcony and it was an impressive space even when empty.

This latter space was classified as Manchester Canvas 2, which had a capacity of 200 and where I had booked some tickets for the South London punks Snuff in April 24. However, rather unexpectedly the entire venue closed, and that show was relocated to the Breadshed. Thus, this venue was then added to the ‘Jimmy missing venue’ list where either the venue had closed prior to the gig, or I could not actually attend the event despite having tickets. Previous entries on this list include the Hacienda, Fairfield Club and Jilly’s Rockworld.   

The larger room containing Manchester Canvas 1 had space for 550 punters and had hosted events featuring Liam Fray, Happy Mondays, Dutch Uncles and the Warehouse Project. I attended just the once in September 2023 on a filthy rainy night.

Coach Party on stage at Canvas. Image Credit Aesthete.

The room downstairs on entry had a bar to the left and the stage to the right and the already traditional sticky floor in between. The band that evening was Coach Party, a four-piece indie rock band from Isle of Wight and they had an innate quirkiness to them which I found very enjoyable.

One of the band members Steph Norris used to be a manager of Black Sheep, one of the few music venues on the island. They have since been followed by fellow ‘Caulkheads’ Wet Leg who are making their own large strides in the music industry.

The postscript this week is that this is my 100th Manchester article, a long way away from the very first one that I posted about Manchester Apollo nearly six years ago!

Manchester Venues 140 to 141

If you head out the back exit of Piccadilly station you drop initially to the metro level and then the escalator gravitates down again to Fairfield Street at ground level and the accompanying taxi rank. Just beyond the cabs is a lift that takes you up to Platform 12 and then onto the next level and into the waiting area outside Platform 13 and 14. For more unscrupulous punters it could be used as a ticket barrier avoidance route!

Piccadilly Station with the lift in the right of picture. Image Credit showmethejourney.com

There are a plethora of breweries near the station ensconced in back streets and railway sidings. If you walk down Baring Street, you reach the hidden oasis of Mayfield Park, the 6.5 acre environmental green space encompassing the River Medlock which is the city’s first green space for over 100 years. To illustrate the industrial heritage of the area, thirteen Victorian wells were discovered in the construction and three were identified as still functional thus were then utilised to provide 20 cubic metres of water each to maintain the vegetation.  

Heading back from the park you would find yourself at Mayfield Depot which contains Escape to Freight Island with all their food and drink stalls and is also the location for conferences and fashion shows alongside the immensely popular Warehouse Project dance events. When waiting for later trains home on the overhead vantage point of Platform 14 I have regularly borne witness to the most extraordinary queues of customers awaiting access.  

Mayfield Park. Image Credit placenorthwest.co.uk

There was previously a venue alongside the Depot called the Fairfield Social Club on the wonderfully named Temperance Street where I once had tickets for a gig but unfortunately, they upgraded the show to another venue, and I never managed to attend there prior to its subsequent closure. It does now appear they have reopened Fairfield but in a different location over in Ancoats, near the Blackjack brewery, and they hold regular comedy nights there.   

Back on Fairfield St, you find one of Manchester’s most distinctive institutions, namely Manchester Star and Garter, the name of the establishment derives from the insignia pertaining to the Order of the Garter. It was originally built in 1803 outside the train station which had several monikers, including London Road prior to the current Piccadilly name. The build of the rail link to Oxford Road station in 1849 necessitated a brick by brick 100-yard movement of the venue, with its subsequent reopening in 1877.

Its initial incarnation was as a hotel containing an in house brewery. In 1986, the closure of the adjacent Mayfield station caused a chain reaction of the hotel also ceasing trading, and the area morphed into a brief ‘Dirty Old Town’ period. The building gained Grade II listed status in 1988 and reopened in 1991 as a live music site with its current pub and upstairs club lay out and has thrived despite its unusual location. It currently has a large Ian Curtis mural on one of its side walls.

It was threatened with closure again in the last couple of decades with the potential Northern hub expansion of the railway station. Their future however was solidified in 2020 with a ten year lease being purchased under the auspices of Mayfield Partnership.

It has been used as a location for many TV series including Band of Gold, Cracker, Prime Suspect and most extensively the recent Russell T Davies scripted landmark drama ‘It’s A Sin’. The venue is renowned for indie nights, Smile running for 20 years from 1993 to 2013 and the famous Smiths night which has been running for an even longer period than that.

The Star and Garter. Image Credit NME

It has hosted many diverse groups including Anti-Nazi league meetings, the 30-strong WBA supporters club of Manchester, Vampire Society and a comic night called Anti-Hoot which included the semi-legendary Bolton poet Hovis Presley!  It has mainly a rock/metal roster and was once coined as the ‘Temple of Doom’. Bands that have played there including Half Man Half Biscuit, Discharge, Frank Carter and the Rattlesnakes, Low and remarkably Status Quo in 1999.

For many years I intended to visit but without success, until finally a gig was located, and a sabbatical trip was arranged in March 2015. It does look a little like a haunted house from the outside, evoking comparisons to the Buffy the Vampire Slayer ‘Fear Itself’ episode, but that was instantly dispelled by the warm welcome in the downstairs bar!  We then sallied up to the 200 capacity venue room and the first act on stage was You Want Fox, a noisy female two-piece from Nottingham.

The headline act was the East Town Pirates who travelled in from Ipswich to air their stompy sea shanties and have been referenced as sounding like ‘Motorhead meets the Pogues’. I returned once more in 2022 to see a band called the Reverbs.

In December 2021, local legend Tim Burgess put on a record fair themed event which had a novel set taking place on a Sunday lunchtime at the Manchester Piccadilly Station Mezzanine. The first challenge was actually finding this location and it transpired to be in the aforementioned metro entry level. By the time we found the spot, we only caught the last three tracks of an acoustic set from Starsailor’s James Walsh, who had an appropriate fine busker’s voice which matched the setting!