GOOD TIMES
&
GOOD TUNES
get lost discovers Belfast’s credentials as one of the music capitals of the world.
Words and images Belinda Luksic
GOOD TIMES
&
GOOD TUNES
get lost discovers Belfast’s credentials as one of the music capitals of the world.
Words Belinda Luksic
GOOD
TIMES
&
GOOD
TUNES
get lost discovers Belfast’s credentials as one of the music capitals of the world.
Words and images Belinda Luksic
You know you’re in good hands
on a Belfast music tour when your guide lets slip that she once jumped on stage to drum Peaches with punk rock icons, The Stranglers.
Dolores Vischer is a professional Green Badge Tour Guide based in Belfast, whose knowledge of the area extends from 1950s showbands to punk, to modern day pop and everything in between. She also knows where to see the best gigs, making her a good person to know in a town that's been newly anointed a UNESCO City of Music.
The tiny, cobbled Commerical Court alleyway in the Cathedral Quarter is one of Belfast's most historic thoroughfares. There is a tale from the 1960s of a man's horse, having waited an eternity for its owner, taking matters into its own hands and entering the Duke of York.
“In the punk days, there wasn’t the security there is now. You could jump on stage and dance alongside the band,” she says. During a The Stranglers gig in 1979, teenage Dolores did just that, hopping over to drummer Jet Black and announcing she could play. No sooner had the words left her lips, than she was left holding the sticks as he ran to the loo. “I think I did OK.”
Ulster Hall this morning, at the start of our three hour walking tour, is more quilting society meet-up than punk rock dive (the Ulster Orchestra is performing here tonight). But if the walls of this Victorian music hall could talk, they might ring with the melodic pop-punk of The Buzzcocks, the headbanging rock of AC/DC or dark pop of The Pixies. It’s not who has played Ulster Hall, but rather, who hasn’t.
The Ulster Hall has hosted everything and everyone, from Led Zeppelin and Dexys Midnight Runners, to classical recitations and political debates.
During the Troubles, the city lay in darkness, cordoned off at night. Ulster Hall was the music-goer’s equivalent of a pot of gold at the end of the rainbow. Sitting just outside the no-go zone, it played host to local and (the occasional) international artist.
Led Zeppelin famously debuted Stairway to Heaven here in 1971. As the story goes, punters were more invested in getting a Guinness at the bar than listening to a song they didn’t know. A decade later, Dexys Midnight Runners rocked out their singalong, clomp-a-lot hit Come on Eileen when the floor caved in. “Nobody stopped dancing, they just moved further back from the big hole,” says Dolores.
Can't argue.
Joe Strummer of The Clash, who first played their first Belfast gig at McMordie Hall in 1977.
Click play to watch
Belfast has had many incarnations since becoming a city in 1888. Shipbuilding, linen, whiskey, tobacco and rope were its lifeblood. Filming of the big budget US fantasy drama television series, Game of Thrones helped its reinvention. But it’s music that helped raise it up and out of its darkest times and which continues to unify it today.
“Music is woven into the DNA of Belfast,” says Snow Patrol frontman Gary Lightbody, who along with Emmy-nominated composer Hannah Peel is one of the Belfast Music patrons. “We have so many incredible bands and artists — and more every single year. I’ve watched in these last 25 years of relative peace the music scene grow and then thrive and now burst at the seams with fearless and limitless talent.”
“I’ve watched, in these last 25 years of relative peace, the music scene grow and then thrive and now burst at the seams with fearless and limitless talent.”
Belfast City Hall was built in 1906 to commemorate the city, and it’s here the Belfast City Council conceived its UNESCO bid. We come to it via streets slick with rain, its copper dome bright green against grey mushroom skies. Inside the Neo-Baroque building, chequerboard floors and marble staircases lead to decorative arches, frescoes and a dome inlaid with stained glass.
Local pride.
Local pride.
Belfast City Hall run three free tours a day.
All that remains of the Maritime Hotel is a brick wall and blue plaque announcing it as ‘the birthplace of the rhythm and blues in Belfast in 1964'. That’s when a young Van Morrison stepped onto the stage, launching his global career and putting Belfast on the musical map. “Before the Beatles and the Rolling Stones, we had American swing music and jazz,” says Dolores. “The Maritime Hotel changed that.”
'Van the Man' used to suffer so much from stage fright, he'd perform entire gigs with his back to the crowd...this is not him.
For five years leading up to the Troubles, it was the place to be. Van Morrison wrote the raunchy rock song Gloria on its stage. Local artists The Aztecs, The Loving Kind, and even Rory Gallagher, a Donegal lad who turned down a spot in the Rolling Stones to pursue a solo career, performed here with his band Taste.
Plenty of stories over 302 years at Kelly's.
A Saturday afternoon in the Cathedral Quarter.
We swing past the Presbyterian Church where the HARP congregation organised the first Belfast Musical Festival, music store Starr Records and around the corner to Kelly’s Cellars, a traditional pub claiming to be Belfast’s oldest (one of several jostling for the title). It’s closed but later, I find a cosy tavern and beer garden where a young brother-sister duo playing violin and acoustic guitar perform a rousing traditional set.
On a Saturday afternoon, the maze of graffiti-splashed lanes and warehouses of the Cathedral Quarter is packed with good craic, free flowing beer and a remarkable number of cover artists toting a guitar.
It’s spitting distance from where legendary punk hangout Harp Bar once stood. Good Vibrations record label founder Terri Hooley held gigs late at night in this once-bombed, heavily fortified bar in the heart of the no-go zone at the height of the conflict. Under the cloak of darkness, young punks from both sides of the divide would come together to pogo and share good craic.
The world's best bands have played the city but it's also a hotbed for local untapped talent.
The Spaniard is a narrow bar set over three levels in the Cathedral Quarter, and is a great place to catch a tune.
Around the corner at the Oh Yeah Music Centre, a not-for-profit studio and performance space where our tour ends, the DIY sentiment continues with a performance from local indie pop artist Sasha Samara. The theatrette is a music-lovers cornucopia stuffed with memorabilia from local and international artists including the guitar used in Snow Patrol’s song Chasing Cars and a vintage street sign of Cyprus Avenue.
“Terry Hooley said ‘New York has the haircuts, London has the trousers, but Belfast has the reason,” recalls Dolores. “We were desperate to get good music.” Turns out necessity is the mother of all invention. We fall quiet as Sasha Samara takes the stage.
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