Portsmouth News

IT’S THE END OF A WONDERFUL ERA

LOOKING BACK AT 30 YEARS OF GIGS AT THE PYRAMIDS

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Since darlings of the thenhot shoegaze scene, Lush, headlined at The Pyramids in Southsea on October 29, 1991, it has played host to more than 500 gigs over the past three decades.

But when multi-platinum American rapper The Game performed there on January 31 no-one would have guessed that it could be the last ever show to be held at the distinctiv­e seafront venue. The spring touring season was just about to get underway – indie rockers Ash and The Subways, plus veteran punks Stiff Little Fingers were all due to play The Pyramids in March, with more on the slate.

But as March progressed and the Covid-19 pandemic took hold, tours began to be cancelled. And then when the government ordered all entertainm­ent establishm­ents to close, that was it.

Now with the news that owners Portsmouth City Council are looking to revamp it as a trampoline, soft-play and super-gym facility, scrapping the pools and The Plaza event space, it would appear the end has come.

With its unusually shaped structure, carpeted floor and whiff of chlorine from the complex’s neighbouri­ng pool, The Plaza was never designed to be a concert venue – it was a generic event space.

Promoters Claire Davies and Ian Binnington stumbled across the hall when they were looking for potential gig sites as part of the Portsmouth Venue Campaign (PVC) in 1990. With a capacity of 1,150 and being far enough away from residentia­l areas not to cause noise problems, it looked promising. And so it was – among the acts to have played there, some of have gone on to become arena and even stadium fillers, for others this was as big as they got.

Muse notably played there twice just four nights apart in May 1999 as the opening act for 3 Colours Red and Feeder. The following May they returned as headliners – with the up-andcoming Coldplay. Whatever happened to them…?

Or the largely unheralded Scottish rock trio Biffy Clyro opening for Hundred Reasons in 2004? Or Snow Patrol supporting quirky Americans Grandaddy in 2003 just as their breakthrou­gh song Run was picking up steam?

At its peak it hosted up to 30 gigs a year, reflecting changing tastes and scenes, with indie, Britpop, punk-pop, emo, danceorien­ted acts and various shades of metal all represente­d. The Pyramids became an establishe­d part of the national touring circuit and was a crucial local stepping stone for acts to progress from The Wedgewood Rooms to Portsmouth Guildhall.

When The Pyramids was last under threat in 2008, it had actually just had its busiest ever year for concerts, but repair and maintenanc­e bills were stacking up. PVC helped fight a successful campaign to keep it open.

However, following an enforced closure of several months in 2014 for repairs caused by flooding, it struggled to regain its place, and the number of gigs there has fallen off in recent years.

Ian, of PVC, admits the announceme­nt took him by surprise, and he is concerned about the wider implicatio­ns.

‘I’ve never referred to The Pyramids as a music venue, I think that would be a disservice to a lot of other venues up and down the UK. It was a space which was intended to be used for a variety of events. It’s the loss of this space which is the major concern because it's not just going to affect gigs, it’s going to affect a whole load of other events where there’s no alternativ­e space for them.

‘With regards to music, though, once you lose that midrange potential venue, you don’t have that stepping stone from your grassroots smaller venues to bigger civic halls. For years we have always worked on that premise, being able to develop relationsh­ips with bands on that basis that there is a longer term picture and it’s not just about coming in, doing one gig and that’s it.’

And he acknowledg­es things have changed since they started promoting – and had industry backing.

‘The musical map is changing – it’s a far more competitiv­e business these days, there are more operators and more promoters out there and we’re all competing, and if what is being offered by one venue or operator is better than what you can offer, then you start to lose out.

‘I’m not scaremonge­ring, but by taking out that level it potentiall­y opens it up to others.

‘There are those, without naming names, who are not too distant from here who, will be rubbing their hands at this outcome – you’re offering an open goal for them, basically.’

Councillor Steve Pitt, in charge of leisure and cultural matters at PCC says the decision to repurpose the pool and Plaza was a tough financial one.

‘I think Cllr Will Purvis summed it up best when he said it’s like asking people: would you like to go to Disneyland, The Bahamas or for a weekend in Cornwall? When you know you can only afford the weekend in Cornwall. It's disingenuo­us. There is no alternativ­e – we don’t have the money to keep it open as it is. ‘The building is at the end of the life it was expected to have. Whatever anyone does with it, it is going to have to be demolished in about a decade.

‘There’s no avoiding that.

‘The whole thing is a horrible situation to be in, but it’s a number of factors colliding at the same time – coronaviru­s, the building coming to the end of life, and years of not investing what the building needed.’

But he adds there is a wider plan to ‘improve and regenerate’ the city’s performanc­e spaces: ‘None of this is being done in isolation, but it’s only the bit about The Pyramids which is out there in public right now.’

Muse notably played there twice as a support act just four days apart in 1999

The musical map is changing – it’s far more competit ive these days

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