Showing posts with label Newcastle City Hall. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Newcastle City Hall. Show all posts

Thursday, 31 January 2013

Save Newcastle Hall Petition Hand-In

 
We were a bit windswept, but it was the Council that were blown away when we gave them 13,000 signatures in support of Newcastle City Hall.

And we're also on Sky Tyne and Wear, with Cllr Veronica Dunn. So, Newcastle City Council says here that they will work with the users of Newcastle City Hall. That's us, the people. Let's see if we can now find a way forward. http://tyneandwear.sky.com/news/article/55062

http://tyneandwear.sky.com/news/article/55062
 

Thanks to all who have signed and shared the petition, which remains open. The petition will also be formally submitted to a full council meeting in the Council chamber next week.

With best wishes and fingers crossed for a positive future for Newcastle City Hall,

North East Music History

http://www.facebook.com/groups/northeastmusichistory/



 

Friday, 14 December 2012

Save Newcastle City Hall - an update

By North East Music History

The Newcastle City Hall Facebook page has added a new post about its future which you can find here:


North East Music History (NEMH) has the following comments to make about this:
Firstly, as we’ve made clear previously, the focus of our campaign is certainly not the management and staff of the venue itself. Our campaign is targeted at the people in Newcastle Council who will determine the future of the City Hall. The key decisions on this will not, alas, be left to the people who work at the venue.
The statement indicates there is now considerable speculation that the City Hall is under threat of closure. That’s true and is hardly surprising when Cllr Nick Forbes, Leader of the City Council and the man ultimately responsible for decisions on this issue, told the BBC on 27th November, “the whole site - the City Hall and Pool - doesn't have a long-term future given the current funding climate.”
Whilst NEMH welcomes the statement that the venue management has “put forward a series of proposals to enhance the financial viability of the City Hall”, we do not consider that, in itself, changes anything regarding our campaign. We don’t know the details of these proposals, we don’t yet know whether the Council is prepared to accept and implement them – and we still don’t know what the Council’s own plan is for the long term use of the site.
In short, we believe our campaign to save the City Hall as a vibrant performance venue is still very much needed. The campaign will continue and indeed will be intensified early in the New Year.
Finally, as the Newcastle City Hall post says, the venue is continuing to operate and tickets are on sale for a range of gigs in 2013. NEMH hopes you will support the venue by going to City Hall gigs and continue to support the campaign by signing the petition at www.change.org/savenewcastlecityhall , which has so far collected over 8,000 signatures online and in the street. The two things are hardly mutually exclusive!

Thursday, 22 November 2012

Save Newcastle City Hall



by North East Music History



PRESS RELEASE – NORTH EAST MUSIC HISTORY – FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE


NORTH EAST MUSIC LOVERS CALL ON COUNCIL TO SAVE NEWCASTLE CITY HALL 





The North East's music-loving public are rushing to defend Newcastle City Hall, demanding that it should continue as a performance venue. Newcastle City Council has asked for people’s views on the future of the City Hall, within the recently published Budget proposals.


The North East Music History group on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/groups/northeastmusichistory  has once again demonstrated the power of social media, by launching an e-petition calling for the City Hall to be saved as a music venue. In less than 24 hours, it has already gathered more than 1,000 signatures and expects to attract at least 10,000 signatures by the end of the consultation period.


North East Music History group and blog admin, Hazel Plater, author and ex-employee of Newcastle's legendary Riverside music venue, which closed in 1999, said,“We have lost Newcastle's iconic venues The Mayfair and Riverside in recent history, and the Club A-Go-Go before them. Newcastle City Hall has so much history; from orchestras and opera, Chuck Berry, Bo Diddley, Dylan, Beatles, Hendrix, Zeppelin, Bowie, Blondie, Lindisfarne Christmas Concerts, Stand-up Comedy and much more. It’s not at all clear what Newcastle City Council’s intentions are towards the City Hall site. Our group believes that the Council should do whatever is necessary to save the City Hall as a performance venue. This would not only recognise its iconic status and its rich musical history but also acknowledge that it still has massive potential as a performance venue in the future, as part of the cultural industry activity that we hope will form an important part of our future local economy.”


Tony Stephenson, North East Music History group contributor said, "We need first to secure the council's commitment to retaining the City Hall as a performance venue in a way that will enable to offer a great experience to the ticket buying public. Whether that is as a wholly run public enterprise or as a partnership or a privately run deal (with absolutely binding terms and conditions from the Council) I, personally, am prepared to be pragmatic about. The important thing is to secure its future and commitment to its continuation as a viable venue, not to sell it off now or allow it to pass into the hands of people who will run it down in order to pitch for change of use of the site and then it's lost anyway."


Martin Craig, a musician and also part of the NEMH group said, “We want more members of the public plus performers linked to Newcastle City Hall to sign the petition before the end of the consultation period on 1st February 2013. We are conducting a high profile campaign to save the City Hall for future generations.”


If you want to add your voice to the e-petition to save Newcastle City Hall you can go online at:

https://www.change.org/en-GB/petitions/newcastle-city-council-save-newcastle-city-hall




WEB LINKS:

Relevant Newcastle City Council document: http://www.newcastle.gov.uk/sites/drupalncc.newcastle.gov.uk/files/wwwfileroot/your-council/budget_and_annual_report/budget_2016_-_13_-_city_hall_and_city_pool.pdf

North East Music History Facebook group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/northeastmusichistory/

North East Music History blog: http://www.northeastmusichistory.org.uk




ENDS. XXXXXXXX







Newcastle City Hall - under threat.

Saturday, 5 May 2012

L’Anarchie and the Bunnymen


By Neil Stonehouse


A diary entry from 1st May 1981 as a raw 16 year old.

The day after Echo and the Bunnymen at the City Hall, Newcastle upon Tyne.

“Thursday is finally here - The Undertones were brilliant on Monday but tonight's was the one that I'd been waiting months for.  Work was a blur - don't think I actually did anything all day - mind was elsewhere.  Straight home - wolfed the tea down quick wash then washed the hair - almost looks like Mac's, on with the Camo gear and away we go.

Rob was on the bus upstairs waiting - doesn't look like anyone else on the bus is going to the Bunnymen.  Get into Worswick Street for 7.10 - going to go to the Jubilee for a pint if I can get Fatty in with me - success I get served.

Get into the City Hall and down to the bar just as the support band (the Blue Orchids) start their set - heard them on Peel a few times but they're not really my scene.  2 more pints of Exhibition and I'm starting to feel a bit pissed - I go into the queue for the t-shirts.  I get both colours one is mauve the other is pale blue.  The kid who looks like Julian Cope that was at The Undertones is here again and he's got the Vive L'Anarchie t-shirt on again.  B*stard won't tell anyone where he got it from.  Get into my seat 3 or 4 minutes before the bell goes.  Here we go - just as the band are coming on I make my break for the front row - Get in - the bouncer let me past - Fatty didn't get past though.

Set was:

With a Hip - off the new album
All That Jazz
A Promise - new album
That Golden Smile (Show of Strength) - know this from the Peel session
Pride
It Was a Pleasure - off new album - brilliant
Over the Wall
Zimbo
Heaven up Here - know this one from the Peel session
Pictures on My Wall
No Dark Things - off new album
Villiers Terrace
Crocodiles
Rescue

Best gig of my life – ever.

Can't wait for the album now - from what I've heard tonight it's going to be far better than Crocodiles.”

Phaze, 44-46 High Bridge Street, Newcastle upon Tyne
Discussion on the NEMH Facebook group revealed this shop to have been the vendor of that coveted Vive L'Anarchie t-shirt. Photo by Neil Newton


Friday, 16 March 2012

Red Wedge at Newcastle City Hall, January 1986

By John Hardy 


"The Red Wedge gig at Newcastle City Hall was one of the best things we ever did.” - Johnny Marr


On a cold Friday night in January 1986, the Red Wedge bandwagon rolled into Newcastle upon Tyne for what was to be the final night of a week long series of concerts aimed at raising political awareness amongst the UK’s young voters.  Also on the agenda was the drumming up of support for Mr Kinnock’s ailing Labour Party: a sort of Band Aid for the proletariat.



Red Wedge ticket - Newcastle City Hall, January 1986 - photo  by John Hardy




Refreshed by The Farmer Rest’s finest and resplendent in our GPO issue overcoats recently purchased from the Army & Navy Store in the Handyside Arcade, my mate and I thought we were the embodiment of disenfranchised working class youth when in fact what we really were was a couple of immature, nerdy sixth formers with big hair, fresh out of the country, little fish in a big pond.  I do believe that we were aware though, that this was to be no ordinary evening at the City Hall.


The 7.30 start caught many of the gig-goers on the hop and Billy Bragg was already partway through his set of firebrand rhetoric as we took our seats in the stalls.  The evening passed by in a bit of a haze, as act after act were wheeled out to do a short two or three song set, such were the time constraints in place.  Chart acts such as Junior, Dee C Lee and The Communards went shoulder to shoulder with up and coming groovers like Lorna Gee, who delivered her memorable tune ‘Three Weeks Gone Mi Giro’ with great aplomb.


The North East was well represented too, particularly by the Kitchenware acts The Kane Gang and Prefab Sprout, whose two song set consisted of ‘Dublin’ and ‘Cruel’.  Paddy gave a little tease of what was to come when he introduced ‘one of the Smiths… Wendy Smith!’


Local hero Alan Hull was introduced as ‘probably one of the most political acts on the bill tonight’, since he was at that time standing as a Labour party candidate for Gateshead Council.  The late Lindisfarne leader took us through an acoustic set which featured the topical ‘Cruisin’ to Disaster’.  Another highlight was Tom Robinson performing a couple of his own excellent acoustic numbers.  Red Wedge was the brainchild of Bragg, Jerry Dammers and Paul Weller; another memory that remains was the latter two jamming on a great version of The Style Council’s ‘Walls Come Tumbling Down’.


Johnny Marr and Andy Rourke had played on several of the previous Red Wedge dates and, after encountering what they felt was indifference and hostility from several of the other acts, had returned to Manchester to rally the troops and, with Morrissey and Mike Joyce in tow, headed forth to Newcastle for an unannounced surprise appearance.


“The other bands were a little bit perplexed as to what we were doing there.  We had no instruments, so we borrowed The Style Council's equipment and just tore the roof off the place.  In the middle of the set we just walked on to this announcement and the place went bananas.” - Johnny Marr.


Morrissey and co. delivered a rocking four song set featuring ‘Shakespeare’s Sister’, ‘I Want The One I Can’t Have’, ‘The Boy With The Thorn In His Side’ and ‘Bigmouth Strikes Again’.  For once, the ever quotable Morrissey was not exaggerating when, in a 1986 interview with NME, he remembered;


“We made a very brief, but stormy appearance.  When we took to the stage the audience reeled back in horror.  They took their Walkmans off and threw down their cardigans.  Suddenly the place was alight, aflame with passion!"


With the chimes of ‘Bigmouth’ still ringing through the auditorium, the band exited stage left, Morrissey’s shirt, or rather blouse tossed to the baying hordes, leaving my mate and I, the pretend postmen, astonished and open mouthed: did that really just happen?  January 31st 1986 was one of the final Smiths appearances as a classic four piece line-up.  Things were never to be this pure or spontaneous again.


 Anything that was to follow was to be an anti-climax, for myself at any rate, although I do remember a Band Aid style finale of ‘Many Rivers to Cross’ as a fitting end to a wonderful evening.    My mate and I, along with 2,000 fellow Thatcher’s Children, left the City Hall that night uplifted by the thought that we could make a difference, all through the power of rock music… the heady wine of youth.  I wish I knew where I put that postie’s coat… 

Red Wedge Tour Programme, January 1986 - photo by John Hardy


Reference: http://www.passionsjustlikemine.com/live/smiths-g860131.htm