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- {{{ MANCHESTER'S SCENE}}}
- ==================
-
- Supposedly the home of house
- music in the North of England,
- if you ask people about
- Manchester, they are likely to
- come up with one or more of the
- following: the Hacienda, New
- Order, Happy Mondays, Stone
- Roses, 808 State, etc. The
- whole 'Madchester' scene really
- took off in 1989 (as I moved up,
- by coincidence). But that was
- five years ago - has time stood
- still, or is there more than
- just the hype? At the moment,
- you can't seem to move in
- Manchester without coming across
- another new night starting up.
- This seems like a tradition,
- since the city has a massive
- student population, which enjoys
- clubbing as much as the locals
- do. However, the recent mass of
- 'student nights' seem to rely on
- cheap beer, unknown DJs, and
- promoters who know nothing about
- dance music.
-
- However, the venues stay the
- same, even if promoters come and
- go. Perhaps the most famous is
- the Hacienda, which became
- arguably the focal point of
- northern clubbing in the late
- 80s when Mike Pickering and
- Graeme Park were residents at
- 'Nude' on Fridays. Graeme Park
- now takes control of the
- Saturdays along with Tom
- Wainwright (with the eclectic
- John McCready downstairs in the
- Gay Traitor Bar), while Mike
- Pickering plays just about
- everywhere BUT manchester when
- he's not being a pop star with
- M-People. Fridays is now called
- 'Shine', and has guests most
- weeks (eg Todd Terry, Farley
- Jackmaster Funk, etc). Every
- last Wednesday of the month is
- 'Flesh', the north's biggest gay
- night, which goes on 'til 4am
- (as do Fridays and Saturdays
- most nights). However, the Hac
- has had its share of problems,
- being closed down by the police
- and closing itself on more than
- one occasion, as the result of
- gang and gun violence (which
- happily, is the exception rather
- than the rule these days). It
- also has a cafe which serves
- meals during club nights, at
- reasonable prices - the food's
- quite good too!
-
- 'Flesh' is only one of the many
- nights which serve the gay
- community. In fact, Manchester
- has its own Gay Village in the
- heart of the city, with clubs
- and bars that are part of the
- clubbing scene. Perhaps the
- best known is the Paradise
- Factory, which was formerly the
- headquarters of the now- defunct
- Factory records (which had New
- Order, Joy Division and Durutti
- Column on its roster). With a
- dancefloor, balcony level and
- the infamous loft, this venue
- has seen some of the best nights
- in Manchester since opening,
- including LuvDup's 'Jolly Roger'
- in 1993. At Equinox on Bloom
- Street, Manumission rose from
- nowhere to DJ Magazine's number
- One club in the UK at the start
- of this year, before heading to
- Ibiza this summer (with a secret
- new years eve bash planned back
- in Mcr). For a drink and a
- chill-out rendezvous, Manto bar
- is open all day and from
- 03:00-07:00 on Saturday night/
- Sunday mornings.
-
- Other clubs worth checking out
- if you're up here include Home
- and Sankeys Soap. Home is on
- Ducie St, about 100m from
- Piccadilly station, and hosts
- LuvDup, Foundation, Seconds Out
- (next one's seeing the return of
- Sasha to Mcr - with a 4hr set
- rumoured!!), and Discovery.
- Most of these are house and
- derivatives, but the odd jungle
- night takes place, as well as
- hip-hop and all things phat via
- the Fat City crew.
-
- If the last is more your thing,
- then check out Hoochie
- Coohchie's nights, currently at
- Sankeys Soap on Fridays, which
- are now done in association with
- JockeySlut magazine. This venue
- is a converted mill just outside
- the city centre, with a rather
- cool open-air forecourt and a
- long main covered area with
- stage at one end - this club has
- some good bands coming
- up,including A Certain Ratio and
- Boots Collins. It also has a
- cafe serving world food, but I
- don't know what it's like.
-
- Perhaps one of the most
- under-rated places is the
- Boardwalk, again just out of the
- city centre (but only 250m from
- the Hacienda), but well worth
- finding. Dave Haslam hosts
- "Yellow" on Fridays (funk,
- disco, soul, etc) and "Freedom"
- on Saturdays - recent guests
- include Jon Marsh (the Beloved -
- the only time he's DJ'd in
- Manchester), Slo-Moshun, Pete
- Heller (Boys Own), etc. It's
- only 5/6ukp on Saturdays, making
- this the best value in Mcr on a
- Saturday night!
-
- There are also plenty of places
- to buy the records you hear in
- the above clubs: the most
- famous is probably Eastern Bloc
- on Oldham Street - across the
- road is Vinyl Exchange, which
- stocks the best range of
- second-hand music in Manchester,
- wirth some bargains as well as
- some very rare collectors
- material. Also check out
- Manchester Underground on Fennel
- St and Fac City records in
- Afflecks Palace, Oldham St. (I
- think Spin Inn has re-opened
- just off Market St, but I'm not
- sure - they were very good for
- hardcore/jungle). Also good for
- all non-commercial stuff is
- Piccadilly Records on Brown St,
- as well as all the major record
- superstores on Market St.
-
- Radio stations: Piccadilly Key
- 103 is the biggest, but plays
- commercial shit - avoid (even
- Stu Allen's 'rave' show is
- crap). Kiss 102 came on air in
- October, and is still finding
- its feet, but has some very good
- shows in the evenings. There
- are also some very good pirate
- stations, eg Soul Nation 104.6,
- but these come and go - just
- keep checking the radio FM dial!
-
- I've lived here for over five
- years, and, as you can probably
- guess, I love this city. If
- you're not a UK resident and
- make a trip to the UK, you
- should make the visit if you
- enjoy clubbing and dance music
- in general. It's about 2 1/4
- hours by train from London, easy
- to get to from most of the UK,
- and well worth the visit.
-
- {{Andy S - Manchester, England}}
- 25th Nov. 94