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Thank you for subscribing See our Could not subscribe, try again later Invalid Email Plymouth, it’s a cultural backwater. No decent bands ever came here. The city might be suffering from a lack of venues at present, but Plymouth is actually a key landmark in the history of rock n roll. It turns out just about every major band or artist since the Beatles, and even before, has played here. Oh, and the Beatles played here too. Don’t believe me? Here are 50 – yes, 50 - gigs that prove all the greats of modern music, and Michael Buble, visited the city.
Indeed, the Americans had it right when they named the place where the Mayflower landed Plymouth Rock. Because Plymouth truly rocks like a you-know-what. Read More • 1 The Beatles. The Beatles in Plymouth November 1963, Paul McCartney and George Harrison share the microphone.
The Fab Four played in Plymouth not once but twice, causing mass hysteria among teeny-girls at the ABC cinema (now the Reel) in 1963 and 1964. The sets on both occasions were short and sweet, just 10 songs apiece and a few covers. The heavenly stuff would come later.
The greatest band in the world famously returned to Plymouth when they turned up on the Hoe in September 1967 while in the South West to film Magical Mystery Tour. Their visit is marked with some metal imprints where they sat on the grass, but didn’t smoke any. Read More • 2 Sex Pistols, the Clash, Johnny Thunders and the Heartbreakers, the Damned. The Clash's Joe Strummer and Paul Simonon snapped in the lift of what is now Plymouth's Crowne Plaza, 1976 This fearsome foursome were banned from just about every venue in the country when the punk rock Anarchy Tour got active in December 1976 – but Plymouth, a city famous for its love of freedom, let them play TWICE.
The Pistols headlined two nights at Woods Centre, now lost beneath Drake Circus mall. Famous Plymouth DJ Andy Howard was on the decks that night and even shared a cup of coffee with Johnny Rotten. “He was such an intelligent guy,” recalled Andy. “We talked about everything: the state of music, the adverse reaction to their gigs. 'He was very good at reading people’s personalities.”.
Plymouth was one of just a few cities to host the Anarchy tour in 1976 The Anarchy tour gig has been recreated twice, at the Hub, with tribute bands Sex Pistols Experience and London Calling standing in for the real thing. The Clash (the other greatest band in the world) would return to the city’s Fiesta Suite, in Mayflower Street, to headline their own White Riot tour in May 1977, playing most of their newly released debut LP with support from Buzzcocks, Subway Sect and the Slits. The Clash were snapped in the lift of what is now the Crowne Plaza Hotel, the pics appearing in several books about the band.
Read More • 3 U2. Yes, Plymouth thought U2 were called The U2s Irelands’ greatest musical export, even including Dana, graced the Fiesta Suite on the Boy tour in 1980. This was back when U2 were cool and hadn’t started mucking about with multimedia or tax avoidance. Free gerber accumark v8 crackers. In fact, they were still so relatively unknown this side of the Irish Sea they were actually billed as The U2s. Bono and his chums opened with the track The Ocean, thought to be the first time it was ever played live. DJ Dave Saunders remembers: “They were brilliant.