Preston Venue 42 – The Venue

Situated near to the Bus Station on Lords Walk there is a Preston pub with a long history and many owners. In the 1960’s and 1970’s it was named Moonraker’s and was a firmly established music venue, details on the musical content in this era are a tad sketchy but local legends Dennis Delight and various punk bands are referenced as having played there.

For the 1980’s kids out there you may recognise it when its moniker was the Amsterdam Bar before then changing its name to the Blue Moon. As you entered the pub from the entrance there was a reasonable size tap room and a door to the right transported you into the large main room. It was the first pub Gill and I ever had a drink in on our first date back in January 1988.  

The pub in its current Blitz phase. Image Credit Ents24.

I was a decent pool player in my youth briefly playing for the Joplins pub team, and for many years in the Blue Moon tap room there were a couple of pool tables and I recall one Friday night in there going a personal best ‘winner stay on’ ten games undefeated.  

The name changed again to the Town End bar creating an affinity and linkage to the local Preston North End football team. It then became Pachas which was designed as a ‘fun pub’ under the tutelage of Colin Durnan, who previously ran the infamous Hollywood Bar on Deepdale Road.

In 2004, John Bates, the owner of 12 Bar on Church St took over and reinstated it as a live music hub  again and it then passed over by the owner of the Mill who renamed it the Venue. It then morphed into a club called Beats of Rage. At that current point in time there was a huge game changing Tithebarn development planned across that area of Preston, threatening impending closure so it was cleverly renamed Coda, representing the final bars of a song and they became a successful dance club with a renowned club title Mixmag. Somewhat unsurprisingly the Tithebarn scheme never reached fruition.

A complete change in direction ensued in 2010 when the renowned Frog and Bucket comedy club became ensconced there and the likes of John Bishop and Terry Christian graced the stage. Sarah Millican used to utilise the club to test run her brand-new material.

It then finally became its latest incarnation by reverting back its musical roots under the name of Blitz. Now, somewhat confusingly I did cover in an earlier blog my attendance at the other venue in Preston which for a short period was also called Blitz which in 2013 was in the old Gatsby nightclub building on Great Shaw Street.  

This particular blog though is concerned with the Lords Walk Blitz site where they have been closely linked to Action Records and have had pre tour or promo performances from the likes of Fontaines DC and Snow Patrol.

My one attendance there was on 14/07/06 when it was called Preston The Venue. It was a Battle of the Bands event and the first act we witnessed was Jelly’s Last Jam, who formed in 2005 from the ashes of a previous band called Frencheryk. The bassist Martin Clarke was co-managing the Mitre Tavern pub down on North Road, and two of the band members were also residing there so many of their early rehearsals took place in that boozer. The pub itself has long since closed and is now a business called Vets and Pets.  

The Mitre Tavern. Image Credit Lancashire Evening Post.

The other band we saw were called Green Room who are a three-piece from Preston who also formed in 2005. Their first ever gig was held at the Adelphi venue in Preston, and they were a female fronted act who sat in the trip-hop genre, not dissimilar to Portishead and Massive Attack.       

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