Blackpool Gigs

Blackpool has always been an anathema to me as a Preston North End fan, however grudgingly I must admit the place does have some merits. I had many trips when a wee pup to the Pleasure Beach and me and Gill have had some fine day trips there in the past followed by a Chinese at the Mayflower on the sea front. Additionally, my stag outing involved beer stops on the train back from Blackpool South to Preston.

Blackpool has not been a fertile ground for gigs as I have only attended 4 in total over the years. The first involved Status Quo in 1984 on their farewell tour. You may chortle at that as they are still on the circuit, but it was officially their last tour, until the intervention of Live Aid brought them out of retirement the following year. The concert was at Blackpool Opera House and was my second ever gig.

We travelled the 20 miles over on a trundly bus. It was a large auditorium and we were sat up on the front row of the balcony. They were very good value and thumpingly loud and somewhat predictably ‘Rocking All Over the World’ went down a storm. Due to the encores we missed the last bus and my mate’s dad had to undertake a mercy mission to come and pick us up.

There followed a gap of 6 years to the second gig foray into Blackpool. It was a wholly unplanned one as I was out on a works do on a Friday afternoon around Preston and my mate Spig who resided in Blackpool mentioned that the Family Cat were playing at Blackpool Jenks. I can find no history on the venue, but it has clearly since bit the dust.

This club was home to Zone in its early years.
Blackpool Jenks having seen better days. Image Credit blackpoolgazette.co.uk

After a couple of sherbets, the gig attendance sounded like a fabulous idea, so we pottered off to the train station. On arrival in Blackpool we ran into a couple of his other mates who also decided to attend. Blackpool Jenks was located opposite the North Pier and after going up an endless flight of stairs it resembled a nightclub setting with stage towards the back. Family Cat were the first band I witnessed to have four guitarists which is always an enthralling sight to me as a colossal guitar fan. The four-guitar pronged approach was repeated most effectively years later by Mogwai. It was a very late gig and I recall they made an impressive racket. The day ended with me crashing on Spig’s bedroom floor.

The third gig was to see the Proclaimers in the Winter Gardens on 21/06/08 and they were as enjoyable as ever in a decent venue with excellent visibility. The fourth and final one is a treasured one as me and Gill were lucky enough to see the Specials at the Empress Ballroom on 04/11/09. I was too young to see them on their first time round but grasped the opportunity on their initial reunion tour. It was on an apocalyptically wet Tuesday night and we had a decent Thai meal beforehand. It was a large venue with a huge sprung floor which even if you didn’t dance yourself had an instant trampoline effect and they went down an absolute storm and continue to be as relevant as ever. We squelched off for the last train from Blackpool North which remains one of the most soul less stations I have ever encountered, a proper end of the line. The other place that springs to mind resembling it is Fuengirola which is another unappetising station. There were also many reprobates on the choo-choo, but we landed home safely after what remains a landmark gig.   

Image result for the specials band pictures
The Specials on stage. Image Credit Wikipedia.

https://www.wintergardensblackpool.co.uk/

Manchester Venue 4 – Boardwalk

The Boardwalk was a small venue (capacity initially about 250 before increasing to 400) in an industrial area on Little Peter St behind Deansgate station. It was a stone’s throw from the Hacienda and was a fine venue between 1984 and 1999. It doubled up as a recording space and Oasis played their first ever gig on 18/08/91.

You went up some narrow steps to the main room with a bar on the left and I recall it was a very warm venue.

Picture of John Robb, journalist and lead singer of Membranes and Goldblade, who despite being a Blackpool FC fan is a genuinely good bloke. Image Credit mdm.archive.co.uk

Between 18/06/1987 and 09/10/1992 I attended five gigs there. The first being a very early fine gig by the Proclaimers supported by the Rhythm Sisters. They came on at 11pm with late stage times being a regular occurrence and they played the whole first album and then ran out of songs so played the first track again.

The second gig on the 18/07/87 was a proper event. On John Peel’s show on the Wednesday it was referenced that the legendary Big Black were playing their final ever British dates, the penultimate one being on the Saturday. I put a call into Piccadilly Records box office on the Thursday morning and was informed there were a handful of tickets and asked them to save me two which we agreed would be picked up in person on Saturday afternoon, but upon arrival we were informed that there had been an oversight and the gig was now sold out. Hope extinguished one might think, however there was a chink of light as we were informed that the venue always held 50 tickets back. So off we trotted and we were the first in the queue at 8pm to obtain said tickets. I recall a minibus arriving from Crewe with the aspiration of garnering some tickets.

Pubs were then visited in celebration and we returned to catch the support band Death by Milk Float. Big Black themselves were an intense slightly unsettling experience with their industrial noise, at one point in their enthusiasm the crowd pulled lead singer Steve Albini into the moshpit, causing a 10 minute delay. They were thoroughly worth the ticket palaver to witness them before the band disbanded, ‘Kerosene’ was outstanding. We returned home to watch a recording of Steven Roche wrap up the Tour De France which he won the next day.

Steve Albini of Big Black on stage. Image Credit blogspot.com

The third gig the following year was a band called Pussy Galore who were not that memorable.

The fourth in Sept 89 was Firehose supported again bizarrely by Death by Milk Float. My now wife Gill was studying in Crewe at the time and one of the ticket outlets was located in a record shop there. So on a weekend visit I scamped in to purchase some tickets completing the full circle of the Crewe/Boardwalk link. Firehose appeared out of the original band Minutemen after the untimely death of their lead singer D Boon in a car crash. A chap called EdFromOhio made an approach and encouraged the band to reform with him stepping in as lead singer.

When they came on stage we realised that we had unwittingly being sat near them in the Briton’s Protection pre-gig (very limited band photos available pre-internet to know what people looked like). They were a terrific live act and for some inexplicable reason I wandered into their dressing room and said hello to Ed who walked off without a word which I took as my cue to curb my interloping activities and go home!    

My final appearance at the Boardwalk was to watch Sugar supported by Venus Beads on 09/10/92. Sugar was ex Husker Du Bob Mould’s new band which finally brought him some much deserved critical acclaim. They produced a thunderous set which was a suitable epitaph to a sorely missed venue.