Blackburn King Georges Hall

Ten miles down the road from Preston via bus or rail lies the town of Blackburn. It is another old mill town and was home to the Matthew Brown and Thwaites breweries in 1980’s/1990’s and they dominated the ownership of the public houses in the area.

Situated central Blackburn is the famous old venue King Georges Hall. It is a Grade 2 listed building and was opened in 1921. David Bowie played there on his Ziggy Stardust tour in 1973 and it was a staple on the punk circuit. There are three halls, the Concert Hall (capacity 1800), Windsor Suite (750) and Blakeys Café Bar (500).

You may be surprised to hear I have attended all three venues, the most frequently attended being three appearances at the Windsor Suite. In 1986 I saw the Pogues and remember going to the Dun Horse pub before hands which left a lasting impression as a very odd Goth/Pagan pub, it would not have been out of place in the Wickerman film! The Pogues attracted the usual demented following and ‘Sally Maclannane’ was outstanding.

Later that year, I saw Jesus and Mary Chain supported by the Shop Assistants. The support band stole the show that night with their youthful C86 noisy shoegaze exuberance. They breezed on and their sonic single ‘Safety Net’ was delivered with aplomb and they also played a fine cover of ‘Ace of Spades’. Mary Chain were just not loud enough and were rather disappointing.

The legendary Shop Assistants. Image Credit Twitter

A few months after that on a monsoon like Thursday night I saw the Fall and they were decent with Brix Smith summarily taking the proverbial out of the audience and ‘Mr Pharmacist’ the best track.

I did once attend Blakeys Café Bar. This was to see a Battle of the Bands semi-final event around 1986 in which a couple of pals Warren Beesley and Mick Duffy’s band Purple Turtles were competing. There was an old double decker bus commissioned and we pottered over on that. We actually missed Purple Turtles on that occasion as we were ensconced in a boozer at that point due to my mate Rick’s fixation in finding the only Boddingtons pub in town. We caught the last three bands including the winners, a jazz band called Human Nature. The Turtles missed a top three slot so no qualification to the final.

I have attended the main Concert Hall twice with the sprung dance floor. My first attendance there in 1985 was to see Billy Bragg supported by Surfing Dave and Porky the Poet. It was sold out and they even opened the balconies that night. Billy was a solo performer at that point and was fabulous and I recall ‘Land of No Return’ and ‘Love Gets Dangerous’ being the highlights.

My final attendance was around 1995 to see Portishead. The smoking ban had not yet come into play but people weren’t smoking normal fags so even as a passive attendee it turned into a slightly blissed out experience. Lead singer Beth Gibbons was very nervous initially, but once confidence gained was soon belting it out and they turned out be very good live. I recall the four of us obtaining a dirt-cheap taxi home and a curry in the Dilshad in Preston completed a rather fine night. 

Portishead in concert. Image Credit you tube – Luigi Tesei

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’.