Blackburn leisure boss aims for revival of King George's Hall

A MAJOR review into reviving the fortunes of one of East Lancashire’s top venues has been launched.

Blackburn with Darwen leisure boss Damian Talbot wants King George’s Hall re-established as one of the region’s leading rock and pop venues.

In recent years, King George’s has been losing £300,000 a year.

Last year’s deficit was down to £190,000 and last week’s council executive board deferred a £50,000 cost-saving plan for the coming year while Mr Talbot reviewed how to return King George’s to its regional pre-eminence.

In the 1970s to 1990s it headlined top acts including The Clash, Def Leppard and the Manic Street Preachers, boosting Blackburn’s reputation as one of the places in Lancashire for young people to gather.

Council leisure and culture cabinet member Mr Talbot believes that, with the hall’s 61,000 attendance in the first quarter of this year nearly double the 35,000 for the same period in 2011, now is the time to strike.

He said: “King George’s still has a lot going for it. We sell out top comedy acts like Jimmy Carr , Sarah Millican and John Bishop.

“It is the only concert hall in East Lancashire to host major orchestras like The Halle, who are coming here four times this season, and the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic. We sell three-quarters of the seats.

“Our soul nights are popular and this week King George’s was filmed for the Wigan Casino tribute ‘Northern Soul’.

“Our Utopia reunions have been another success so there is a niche there which shows we can still draw people in.

“At one point, King George’s Hall was a big rock and pop venue and that is something I want to re-establish.

“There is a Catch 22. Promoters want to be sure of selling tickets so we can’t book big acts until we prove that – yet we can’t prove it till we book them.

“Eighteen months ago we had Paolo Nutini at the top of his fame and sold out within hours so we know we can. We need to promote ourselves not just as the venue for Blackburn’s 130,000 people but for East Lancashire with a catchment of half a million.

“Maybe now is the time for a big push or even taking a risk. If we fill King George’s, we fill the pubs, bars and restaurants around which is a key to reviving Blackburn’s night-time economy.

“We had a meeting recently to review the situation and asked for another report with recommendations on how to go forward.”

Comments (8)

1:59pm Mon 20 Aug 12

Dave_P says...

if they are still structurally limited by the ****-up that is Blakey's Bar and limited to seated concerts in the main hall still (or a reduced standing capacity), then no band will want to come.. isn't the hall only just over 1800 capacity too? a bit small for any big bands.
if they are still structurally limited by the ****-up that is Blakey's Bar and limited to seated concerts in the main hall still (or a reduced standing capacity), then no band will want to come.. isn't the hall only just over 1800 capacity too? a bit small for any big bands. Dave_P

2:19pm Mon 20 Aug 12

MHUK says...

Sounds good ha ha get it, mm mm can that big eye sore Blackburn Arena not be used for gigs.... ????
Sounds good ha ha get it, mm mm can that big eye sore Blackburn Arena not be used for gigs.... ???? MHUK

3:54pm Mon 20 Aug 12

tntoast says...

bring back club tropicano
bring back club tropicano tntoast

5:09pm Mon 20 Aug 12

elmo maniac says...

yes bring back club tropicano..... if good stuff is on people will be there, town is pretty dull for a night out, id be happy to spend my money on a good night out down there.
yes bring back club tropicano..... if good stuff is on people will be there, town is pretty dull for a night out, id be happy to spend my money on a good night out down there. elmo maniac

5:24pm Mon 20 Aug 12

Yankee Clipper says...

King George's Hall has got to seriously reinvent itself and start booking original entertainment, instead of simply relying upon tribute bands and wedding receptions. Do this strategically with blue sky thinking, which bravely dares to venture "outside the box", and it will potentially evolve into being the cornerstone which helps reinvigorate the moribund town centre nighttime economy. Otherwise, KGH remains being nothing more than an oversized working men's club hemorrhaging the council's coffers.
King George's Hall has got to seriously reinvent itself and start booking original entertainment, instead of simply relying upon tribute bands and wedding receptions. Do this strategically with blue sky thinking, which bravely dares to venture "outside the box", and it will potentially evolve into being the cornerstone which helps reinvigorate the moribund town centre nighttime economy. Otherwise, KGH remains being nothing more than an oversized working men's club hemorrhaging the council's coffers. Yankee Clipper

11:28pm Mon 20 Aug 12

peely says...

Saw the Beatles & loads of other top groups there in the sixties ! Bring back the good old days !
Saw the Beatles & loads of other top groups there in the sixties ! Bring back the good old days ! peely

11:50am Tue 21 Aug 12

Jack Herer says...

About 20 years ago we put on "acid house" nights at King George's - there were DJs from Cream (the then new and first super club) amongst other big name draws, as well as local talent. People used to come from all over to go - loads of em.

Even when we increased the capacity by having additional rooms open ("Ambience in the Lounge," "Funky House in the Studio"), the events still saw people locked out. Surrounding pubs and bars certainly did well on the overflow.

The council weren't happy though. I suspect these nights were too soon after the warehouse parties. So the nights were stopped on council orders. House music wasn't right for Blackburn, not if the council could help it, no matter how dressed up or stylish we made it.

It could be worth reviving something like that though. Blue sky thinking, why not get the local college kids to sort it in some way? From promotion to artwork to music - the lot. It could be a proper involved council project, teaching business skills as much as anything.

Plus if it does well, you're looking at a regular full King Georges, just like we had before the council stopped it!
About 20 years ago we put on "acid house" nights at King George's - there were DJs from Cream (the then new and first super club) amongst other big name draws, as well as local talent. People used to come from all over to go - loads of em. Even when we increased the capacity by having additional rooms open ("Ambience in the Lounge," "Funky House in the Studio"), the events still saw people locked out. Surrounding pubs and bars certainly did well on the overflow. The council weren't happy though. I suspect these nights were too soon after the warehouse parties. So the nights were stopped on council orders. House music wasn't right for Blackburn, not if the council could help it, no matter how dressed up or stylish we made it. It could be worth reviving something like that though. Blue sky thinking, why not get the local college kids to sort it in some way? From promotion to artwork to music - the lot. It could be a proper involved council project, teaching business skills as much as anything. Plus if it does well, you're looking at a regular full King Georges, just like we had before the council stopped it! Jack Herer

12:49am Sat 25 Aug 12

OnePostThenTheOther says...

Damuan, could I possibly hire your PA for this rave that I'e got planned for a disused factory unit?
Damuan, could I possibly hire your PA for this rave that I'e got planned for a disused factory unit? OnePostThenTheOther

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