Manchester Cool Bars
started in Flok in Stevenson Square, the
whole area rammed with stragglers from Manchester Pride on the other
side of town. I had ran this meetup maybe a year ago, and we'd had to
change bars as we couldn't get in anywhere- everywhere we tried was
full.
This
time we got straight into Soup Kitchen, which was quiet, but with
great funk music, and straight into Eastern Bloc, playing what I think might have
been acid house and was serving sweet treats like rocky road from
behind the counter. I love it there but I think it might have been a
bit niche for the group. After this we headed away from Stevenson
Square up to Hold Fast, on the way to
the Piccadilly Station end of the Northern Quarter. This
nautical-themed bar has accessible SNES consoles at the back of the
bar, where 1991 beat-em-up classic Street Fighter II was programmed
to play. We all had a go, bashing away randomly at the handsets and
occasionally pulling off some coincidental submission move, with 70s
disco pumping out of the sound system. Cain and Grain followed, (indie on the ground
floor, dance upstairs) which led into The Freemount, Matt and Phred's Jazz Club (both dead and dear), the we
ended at Behind Closed Doors, a
porno-chic smut-themed den with tiled walls, 70s mucky mags plastered
to the insides, booths with phones connected to the bar and other
booths, and a risqué cocktail menu, all set to an obscure disco
soundtrack. Fantastic. It's a small bar so there was a queue to get
in, but it was worth it.
Around
15 people showed up for the meetup- one of the most popular nights
I've ran. I'll probably run it again.
Away
from the bar scene I read Memoirs of a Very Stable Genius, a graphic
novel from Shannon Wheeler. Mostly a
series of one-frame newspaper-style visual jokes, the book can be
whipped through quickly; intermittently it features multiple-panel
story strips- some humorous, some interesting. Some somewhat
pointless. Well worth the £2 I spent on it. Not worth the $20 RRP.
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