Sunday 31 January 2016

Crash and Brum 3

(This blog post is the final one of a trilogy about the gigs played by TSOM for Nitelife Promotions in Birmingham and should be read in conjunction with the previous two).

Barely two months after the triumphant gig at the Fighting Cocks in suburban Moseley, TSOM were back in Birmingham once more on their March '83 mini tour, playing this time at the best known of the pub venues, the legendary Golden Eagle in Hill St in the city centre.



For a long time there was a lot of doubt as to whether this gig took place at all. On Heartland Forum a decade ago, Dave R was adamant that it didn't happen. "The Birmingham date was the Selly Park Taven with the Wild and The Wandering (who became PWEI and the Stuffies) as support. I know because I was there. The only Golden Eagle affair was when Motörhead played the Demolition Party and a few Sisters were in their entourage." (in the first part of his statement he is clearly referring to the Bournbrook and to From Eden who became The Wild and The Wandering)

However, on other online Forums, others began to appear who had allegedly been at the gig, usually as part of a "Who did you see before they were famous?" thread, whilst a Songkick user stated that a band called Step Forward had been the support, an unusual detail for a "phantom" gig.


Within a month of each other two long-term fans furnished me with a photo of the poster for the gig, first the ever-generous uber-collector LG, whose copy is pictured above, and then, even more incredibly a lady called Paula also got in touch, as it was her first TSOM gig and she too had a copy of the same poster. Sadly, however, although she remembers having been to the gig, she understandably couldn't recall any specific details alongside the many other gigs which she attended in that era. Surprisingly, given the extent to which TSOM gigs were being bootlegged as they began to dominate the indie charts, no recording or photos have survived from the gig, which was the night after the Liverpool and the night before the Colne gigs previously covered in this blog. As can be seen from the rather informal poster ("two quid in"), the promoters (Nitelife) were the same local enthusiasts who had put on the previous two gigs, this time elevating the band to the biggest venue on their circuit, and which had a reputation (somewhat unusually given its city centre location) of being a bikers' pub at the time of the TSOM visit.


The Golden Eagle stood on the site of an earlier pub, and was the pride and joy of brewers Holts when it opened in 1936, redesigned by the architect FJ Osborne. With its polished black granite facade, and metallic golden eagle motif by noted local artist William Bloye just above what was originally the main entrance, the venue should have been a listed building in its own right, not to mention its incredible musical heritage stretching back to the 1960's. More recently to the TSOM gig, bands such as Iron Maiden and U2 had stopped off there on early tours, playing the upper floor music room which was only accessible via a steep and winding staircase, on which local band 021 are posing in this contemporary photo from the Birmingham Music Archive website. A member of the Birmingham History website (going by the name of "The Purple Cow") remembers the venue well. "It was a lovely, warm, atmospheric place with extraordinary Art Deco internal architecture, fixtures and fittings. The journey to the men's loo was particularly extraordinary, being a long subterranean journey along an originally tiled corridor with authentic period light fittings and brass handrails"


Generations of bands had lugged their instruments and amps up and down these stairs, but eight months after the TSOM gig the pub closed its doors for the pastime, condemned because of structural faults which would have been difficult and expensive to fix for a pub with a dwindling clientele, the post office having by now vacated the neighbouring building. Apparently, not even the famed brass golden eagle plaque survived the demolition, which was unsuccessfully fought by a pressure group determined to keep one of the finest examples of Art Deco architecture in the West Midlands.


Like so many other demolished former gig venues, the site of the Golden Eagle is now a car park, with no sign of its former glory. TSOM's next visit to Birmingham would be of a much higher profile, the legendary first gig with Wayne Hussey at the Tin Can/Fantasy club just over a year later ...

(My thanks are due once again to those who have provided memories, photos and souvenirs of this gig, particularly Paula and LG on this occasion).





10 comments:

  1. Great to stumble on this. I was just looking for stuff on Sisters of Mercy high at Fighting Cocks. I saw Southern Dealth Cult at The Golden Eagle. Have tape somewhere.

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  2. Definitely did play there, i attended with a couple of mates. One whom was slapped by Wayne Hussey. Saw them many times since Tin Can x2, Powerhouse et al Also seen Southern Death , Play Dead, And Also The Trees there

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    1. He would not have been slapped by Wayne Hussey as Ben Gunn was still their guitarist at that time

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    2. I'm the original poster of this comment and have to correct it. Definitely occurred but Hussey didn't join until a few months later. Misinformation from my mate who received the blow (for enchroaching into the dressing room) and always swore it was Wayne. Realised straight after posting the error i'd made. Apologies. Great venue tho.

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    3. Further to my correction, we were new to the band at the time so names and band members weren't as important to us as the music. Thus on seeing them subsequently at Tin Can, Hummingbird etc.. assumed the band members were the same as that 1st time of seeing them. Yes Krimson you are correct

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  4. I was there with my mate, probably my first ever gig. We had heard Sisters on the John Peel show which we listened to every night and thought they were great. One thing I remember about that gig was Eldritch saying "Who wants to hear 1969?" and the "Well you can't cos we don't play it anymore". I'm sure I took some photos on an old 110 film camera but have no idea what happened to them.

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    1. Thanks for your comments, and sorry for the delay in my reply (notifications have been going into my junk folder).They stopped playing 1969 the previous year but people still shouted for it at every gig!

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    2. I was also at this gig. Ben Matthews stayed at our hours in King’s Heath after the gig. He bought me a bag of chips on the way home.

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  5. I was at this gig and until I read your article I couldn't remember why. I was not a Sisters of Mercy fan. I was in fact a fan of Step Forward. Great local band.

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