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Rafters
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Rafters was a nightclub located in the St James Building[1][2] in the centre of Manchester, UK. A number of bands played concerts at Rafters in the 1970s and 1980s
Rob Gretton who went on to become the manager of Joy Division worked at Rafters. It featured in the 2007 film Control.
The Depeche Mode albums An Futurist Night[4] and A Second Now In Manchester[5][note 1] were recorded here in 1981. A Second Now In Manchester was released on CD on Vertigo Records in 1990
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Rafters opened in Manchester in the 1970s in the St James Building in the city centre. The schedule generally remained the same: live gigs on Monday and Wednesday nights and a Folk night on Tuesday. By the mid seventies the venue had become better known by the public and musicians, and leading musical bands began to play there. Following the rise of punk rock in 1976 and 1977, the venue became one of the main places in Manchester for live music. Joy Division performed there and in other Manchester venues such as Rock World.[3]
Numerous new bands played in Rafters in 1977 among them Paul Young of Sad Café and Dougie James. At this time Rob Gretton was one of the DJs at the club and also became a leading figure in the Manchester punk scene. The Stiff Records Test (Chiswick Challenge) organised by Stiff Records took place here on 14 April 1978. The event proved significant in the history of the band Joy Division. Rob Gretton and Tony Wilson of Granada TV were present at the event and saw Joy Division play. Joy Division were the last of 17 bands to play, but made a strong impression on those at the concerts. As Rob Gretton commented:[3]
So they went on about ten to two and they were blazing madmen. And I just went and watched them. Great! Best band I've ever seen – and they sent a tingle up my spine. And I was dancing all over...I went up telling them - at the end - telling them how brilliant I thought it was...And I went raving about them all next day
— Rob Gretton, about Rafters club, memories about Stiff Records Test[3]
Rafters closed in 1983. In its final years the DJ was Mike Shaft who appeared on Piccadilly Radio with Takin' Care of Business. After that the club was renamed as Jilly's which existed to 1993, after which the club was called MusicBox.[3]
1977 concerts | |||
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Date | Musician(s) | Tour | Note |
31 May[6] | Johnny Thunders & the Heartbreakers & Joy Division | Warsaw Tour | -- |
30 June[7] | Generation X & Joy Division | -- | |
1 September[8] | Buzzcocks & Distractions | -- | -- |
8 September | London & The Swords | -- | -- |
13 October[9] | The Yachts & Joy Division | Warsaw Tour | -- |
23 October | Alberto Y Los Trios Paranoias | -- | Teenage Paradise song included in So It Goes TV series (Series 2, show 3)[note 2] |
24 November[note 3][10] | The Heat & Accelerator & Joy Division | Warsaw Tour | -- |
1978 concerts | |||
---|---|---|---|
Date | Musician(s) | Tour | Note |
16 March[3] | Generation X & support | -- | -- |
18 March[3] | The Pleasers & Heart | -- | -- |
20 March[3] | Little Bob Story & Doo Wop Saints | -- | -- |
21 March[3] | Whitesnake & Virginia Wolf | -- | -- |
23 March[3] | Suburban Studs & The Elite | -- | -- |
25 March[3] | The Saints & The Snyde | -- | -- |
28 March[11] | The Zones & The Winners & Joy Division | 1978 Joy Division Tour | -- |
14 April[12] | Fly & Ed Banger & Prime Time Suckers & Jilted John & 2.3 & V2 & The Yo-Yo's & Time Out & Mike King & The Tunes & Joy Division | Left in the form of album Keep On Keepin' On[note 4] | |
10 June[8] | Buzzcocks & Subway Sect | -- | -- |
27 June[13] | Dire Straits | Dire Straits Tour | -- |
1980-1983 concerts | ||||
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Date | Year | Musician(s) | Tour | Note |
4 December | 1980 | Throbbing Gristle | -- | Left in the form of album Rafters Club (IRCD 39)[note 5] and TGV DVD set[note 6] and TG+ DVD set[note 7] |
5 August[14] | 1981 | Depeche Mode | Speak & Spell Tour | First show recorded in the form of bootleg An Futurist Night[4] |
Second show recorded in the form of bootleg A Second Now In Manchester[5][note 1] The album is released on CD Vertigo Records in 1990 | ||||
13 December | 1982 | The Southern Death Cult | -- | Two songs left in the form of album The Southern Death Cult[note 8] |
1986 concerts | |||
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Date | Musician(s) | Tour | Note |
17 July | Easterhouse, Happy Mondays and the Weeds | "Back in the Cellar" (Festival of the Tenth Summer)[note 9] | -- |
Oxford Street (east side): …Nos.65 to 95. St. James's Buildings. Grade II. 20.6.88