Free Trade Hall, Manchester
Places of interest - JOY DIVISION 21/12/2009
AC/DC Free Trade Hall, Manchester, England 1978 [PICTURES]
May 6th 1978
Bob Dylan, live at the Free Trade Hall, Manchester, 1965
Bob Dylan, live at the Free Trade Hall, Manchester, 1965
1.The Times They Are a-Changin'
2.To Ramona
3.If You Gotta Go, Go Now (or Else You Got to Stay All Night)
4.It's Alright, Ma (I'm Only Bleeding)
5.Love Minus Zero/No Limit
6.Mr. Tambourine Man
7.Talkin' World War III Blues
8.Don't Think Twice, It's All Right
9.With God on Our Side
10.She Belongs to Me
11.It Ain't Me Babesi
12.The Lonesome Death of Hattie Carroll
13.All I Really Want to Do
14.It's All Over Now, Baby Blue
Bob Dylan (vocal, acoustic guitar & harmonica).
Recorded live at the Free Trade Hall, Manchester, United Kingdom, may 7th 1965
Johnny Cash - Live - Free Trade Hall - Manchester, UK - 3.9. 1973
Johnny Cash - Free Trade Hall - Manchester, UK - 3.9. 1973
The Tennessee Three
01 706 Union 1:14
Carl Perkins
02 Carl Perkins intro , CC Rider 3:19
03 Matchbox 3:24
04 Green, Green Grass Of Home 3:35
05 One More Loser Goin' Home 2:53
06 Boppin' The Blues 2:52
07 Me And Jesus 3:02
08 talk - intro to Blue Suede Shoes 1:02
09 Blue Suede Shoes 2:49
10 Carl Perkins outro 0:35
Johnny Cash
11 Johnny Cash intro 0:42
12 Big River 2:12
13 Sunday Morning Coming Down 4:12
14 City Of New Orleans 4:02
15 The Ballad Of Barbara 3:53
16 I Still Miss Someone 1:54
17 Me And Bobby McGee 2:09
18 These Hands 3:28
19 A Boy Named Sue 3:21
20 talk - Johnny introduces his father who is in the audience 1:16
21 Goin' To Memphis 4:12
22 Five Feet High And Rising 1:35
23 That Silver Haired Daddy Of Mine 2:44
24 talk - intro to Hey Porter 0:41
25 Hey Porter - cut 1:26
CD2: Total: 31:13
01 I Walk The Line 1:36
02 Johnny introduces June Carter Jackson 2:54
03 If I Were A Carpenter 1:32
04 Help Me Make It Through The Night 1:59
05 talk - June Carter intros to following Jesus songs 1:23
06 Follow Me 3:00
07 Help Me 2:27
08 talk - intro to The Last Supper 0:29
09 The Last Supper 2:50
10 Allegheny 3:46
11 Will The Circle Be Unbroken? 2:55
12 Daddy Sang Bass 2:12
13 announcer & band outro before last song 0:55
14 A Thing Called Love 1:59
15 Johnny says goodbye & introduces band members , announcer & band show outro
Paul McCartney Live In Free Trade Hall, Manchester, UK (Friday 12th September 1975)
01 - Letting Go (00:00)
#Manchester | Radisson Blu Edwardian Manchester Free Trade Hall
To learn more about this venue, please click here:
Radisson Blu Edwardian Manchester Free Trade Hall
The Manchester Hotel brings award-winning, modern style to the city's historic Free Trade Hall, located in the heart of Manchester's City Centre.
This 5 star hotel has 22 fully equipped meeting rooms and 1 spectacular event room with a maximum capacity of 500 people. Ideal for board meetings, training courses, exhibitions, weddings and private dining, each room is purposely designed to offer maximum flexibility.
The Halle Suite is Manchester's largest venue with natural daylight that can cater for up to 500 guests. Free high-speed WiFi up to 150mbps on unlimited devices.
The Manchester Hotel's 263 bedrooms and suites range from stylish doubles and twins to 20 special al fresco suites featuring a covered terrace set within the original building's brick façade.
Anyone seeking truly exceptional privacy, luxury and exclusivity need look no further than the hotel's four sumptuous Pennine suites.
Free Trade Hall, Manchester
Places of interest - JOY DIVISION 21/12/2009
Manchester, City of Manchester, England, United Kingdom, Europe
Manchester is a city and metropolitan borough in Greater Manchester, England, with an estimated population of 512,000. Manchester lies within the Greater Manchester Urban Area, the United Kingdom's second largest urban area, which has a population of 2,553,379. The local authority is Manchester City Council and is at the centre of the Greater Manchester metropolitan county and is situated in the south-central part of North West England, fringed by the Cheshire Plain to the south and the Pennines to the north and east. Inhabitants of Manchester are referred to as Mancunians English. The recorded history of Manchester began with the civilian settlement associated with the Roman fort of Mamucium, which was established in c. 79 AD on a sandstone bluff near the confluence of the rivers Medlock and Irwell. Historically, Manchester was in Lancashire, although areas of Cheshire, south of the River Mersey were incorporated into the city during the 20th century. Throughout the Middle Ages Manchester remained a manorial township but began to expand at an astonishing rate around the turn of the 19th century. Manchester's unplanned urbanisation was brought on by a boom in textile manufacture during the Industrial Revolution, and resulted in it becoming the world's first industrialised city. The building of the Bridgewater Canal in 1761 built to transport coal triggered an early-19th-century factory building boom which transformed Manchester from a township into a major mill town and borough that was granted city status in 1853. In 1877, the Neo Gothic Manchester Town Hall was built and in 1894 the 36 mile Manchester Ship Canal opened; which at the time was the longest river navigation canal in the world, which in turn created the Port of Manchester linking the city to sea. Manchester's fortunes decreased in the subsequent years after WW2 due to deindustrialization however investment in the last two decades spurred by the 1996 Manchester bombing- which was the largest bomb ever detonated in peacetime Britain- spearheaded extensive regeneration of Manchester. Today Manchester is ranked as a beta world city by the Globalization and World Cities Research Network; the city is notable for its architecture, culture, music scene, media links, scientific and engineering output, social impact and sporting connections. Sports clubs which bear the city name include Premier League football teams, Manchester City and Manchester United. Manchester was the site of the world's first railway station, and the place where scientists first split the atom and developed the first stored-programme computer. Manchester is served by two universities, including the largest single-site university in the UK, and has the country's third largest urban economy. As of 2011 Manchester is the fastest growing major city in the UK and the third-most visited city in the UK by foreign visitors, after London and Edinburgh, and the most visited in England outside London. Manchester's history is concerned with textile manufacture during the Industrial Revolution. The great majority of cotton spinning took place in the towns of south Lancashire and north Cheshire, and Manchester was for a time the most productive centre of cotton processing, and later the world's largest marketplace for cotton goods. Manchester was dubbed Cottonopolis and Warehouse City during the Victorian era. In Australia, New Zealand and South Africa, the term manchester is still used for household linen: sheets, pillow cases, towels, etc. The industrial revolution brought about huge change in Manchester and was key to the increase in Manchester's population. Manchester began expanding at an astonishing rate around the turn of the 19th century as people flocked to the city for work from Scotland, Wales, Ireland and other areas of England as part of a process of unplanned urbanisation brought on by the Industrial Revolution. It developed a wide range of industries, so that by 1835 Manchester was without challenge the first and greatest industrial city in the world. Engineering firms initially made machines for the cotton trade, but diversified into general manufacture. Similarly, the chemical industry started by producing bleaches and dyes, but expanded into other areas. Commerce was supported by financial service industries such as banking and insurance. Trade, and feeding the growing population, required a large transport and distribution infrastructure: the canal system was extended, and Manchester became one end of the world's first intercity passenger railway the Liverpool and Manchester Railway. Competition between the various forms of transport kept costs down. In 1878 the GPO (the forerunner of British Telecom) provided its first telephones to a firm in Manchester.
Tori Amos, Free Trade Hall, Manchester, UK, 01/03/94 (Full Show).
Under The Pink Tour, Manchester 01/03/94
Setlist;
1, Smells Like Teen Spirit
(Nirvana cover)
2, Crucify
3, Icicle
4, Precious Things
5, Happy Phantom
6, Pretty Good Year
7, God
8, Silent All These Years
9, Leather
10, The Waitress
11, Upside Down
12, Winter
13, Bells for Her
14, Me and a Gun
15, Baker Baker
Encore:
16, Cornflake Girl
17, China
Encore 2:
18, Flying Dutchman
19, Cloud on My Tongue
20, Song for Eric
This recording is Dedicated to Tori fans everywhere...
Enjoy!...
Sex Pistols - 1976 06 04 Lesser Free Trade Hall, The gig that changed the world (recreation).
The Sex Pistols play the Lesser Free Trade Hall in Manchester 1976.
It seems millions of people claim to have been at Woodstock when only 500,000 or so were really there, but the biggest pop-culture event of the 1960s has nothing on one of the most pivotal of the 1970s: The Sex Pistols' appearance at the Lesser Free Trade Hall in Manchester, England, on June 4, 1976. Proportional to the actual crowd in attendance, perhaps no event in the history of pop music has enjoyed greater retroactive audience growth than the one that's been called The gig that changed the world.
By June 1976, the Sex Pistols had been playing together under that name for only seven months, and though their look, their sound and their nihilistic attitude were already in place, they and the entire British punk scene were still a few months away from truly breaking out. They had drawn just enough attention in the British music press, though, to inspire two young men from Manchester named Howard DeVoto and Pete Shelley to go down and see them play in London in February. From this experience, two things happened: DeVoto and Shelley arranged for the Sex Pistols to come up north and play the Lesser Free Trade Hall; and then they formed their own new band, called the Buzzcocks. News of the June 4 gig in Manchester spread mostly by word of mouth, such that on the night of the show, perhaps as few as 40 people showed up in a room that could hold hundreds. In that small crowd, however, were some names that would help shape the course of pop music over the next decade:
Howard DeVoto and Pete Shelley: Their band, the Buzzcocks, would go on to enjoy enormous popularity and influence in the UK both during and after the punk era.
Ian Curtis, Bernard Sumner and Peter Hook: The very next day, Hook would buy his first guitar, and the three young Mancunians would become a band. That band—originally called the Stiff Kittens and later Warsaw—was Joy Division, one of the best-known and most influential of all the early New Wave bands.
Mark E. Smith: Following the Sex Pistols gig, he started The Fall, a post-punk band that never had a true hit record but influenced generations of followers from Nirvana to Franz Ferdinand.
Steven Patrick Morrissey: The last of these notables to make a name for himself, but one of the most successful, both as leader of The Smiths in the mid-1980s and as a solo artist thereafter.
Tony Wilson: Manchester TV news presenter who would be inspired to start the record label Factory Records, which would help create the thriving Manchester scene of the 1980s and early-90s.
Just a few days after the Sex Pistols stormed Manchester on this day in 1976, they returned to London for gigs on July 4 and 6 that featured two brand-new bands as opening acts: The Clash and The Damned. Three weeks after that, their return gig at the Lesser Free Trade Hall (featuring opening act the Buzzcocks) drew hundreds, as the punk era unofficially opened.
Down By The Riverside (Recorded Live At The Free Trade Hall, Manchester, England - 9th December...
Provided to YouTube by The state51 Conspiracy
Down By The Riverside (Recorded Live At The Free Trade Hall, Manchester, England - 9th December 1957) · Sister Rosetta Tharpe · The Chris Barber Band
Chris Barber Presents The Blues Legacy: Lost & Found Series Volume 1
℗ 2008 Chris Barber/Classic Media Group Ltd
Released on: 2008-03-09
Auto-generated by YouTube.
Baby, Let Me Follow You Down (Live at Royal Albert Hall, London, UK - May 26, 1966 - A...
Baby, Let Me Follow You Down by Bob Dylan, Live at Royal Albert Hall, London, UK - May 26, 1966
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Lyrics:
Baby, let me follow you down, baby let me follow you down
Well, I'll do anything in this God-almighty world
If you just let me follow you down
I'll buy you a diamond ring, I'll buy you a wedding gown
Well, I'll do anything in this God-almighty world
If you just let me follow you down
Can I come home with you, baby can I come home with you
Well, I'll do anything in this God-almighty world
If you just let me come home with you
I'll buy you a broken twine, honey, just for you to climb
Yes I'll do anything in this God-almighty world
If you just once drive me out of my mind
I'll buy you a serpent skirt, I'll buy you a velvet shirt
Yes, I'll do anything in this God-almighty world
If you just don't make me hurt
Baby let me follow you down, baby let me follow you down
Well I'll do anything in this God-almighty world
If you just let me follow you down
Baby let me follow you down, baby let me follow you down
Well, I'll do anything in this God-almighty world
If you just let me follow you down
#BobDylan #Folk #SingerSongwriter
Manchester Architecture Tour
Manchester tour guide Ed Glinert takes us on a trip to some of Manchester's most significant buildings and shows how the city has taken its architectural inspiration from sources around the world. Featuring the Friends Meeting House, the Free Trade Hall (now the Radisson Edwardian Hotel), Manchester Town Hall, Lee House and the Beetham Tower.
Old Time Religion (Reprise) (Recorded Live At The Free Trade Hall, Manchester, England - 9th...
Provided to YouTube by The state51 Conspiracy
Old Time Religion (Reprise) (Recorded Live At The Free Trade Hall, Manchester, England - 9th December 1957) · Sister Rosetta Tharpe · The Chris Barber Band · Ottilie Patterson
Chris Barber Presents The Blues Legacy: Lost & Found Series Volume 1
℗ 2008 Chris Barber/Classic Media Group Ltd
Released on: 2008-03-09
Auto-generated by YouTube.
The Hallé celebrate Radisson Blu Edwardian, Manchester's 10 years at The Free Trade Hall
To celebrate the 10th birthday of the Radisson Blu Edwardian, Manchester, the city's world famous symphony orchestra,The Hallé, produced a new arrangement showcasing Manchester's musical heritage.
Paying homage to the hotel's strong musical links and including snippets from classical works played by The Hallé, legendary performances at The Free Trade Hall by the likes of Bob Dylan and The Sex Pistols, and current acts that have inspired the Manchester music scene.
Things to do in Manchester, England - UK Travel vlog
There are more things to do in Manchester, England than most people know. This vlog focuses on Castlefield and the City Centre, and it's a great way to start understanding Manchester and a little bit of the history of England (UK travel vlog).
This is what you see in this Manchester tour:
- Ruins of the Roman fort
- Bridgewater canal
- Science and Industry Museum
- Albert Square
- Free Manchester Walking Tour in the city centre
- Exchange Square
- Chetham's Library
- Manchester Cathedral
- John Rylands Library
- Manchester Central Library
- St Peter's Square
- The Midland Hotel
- Free Trade Hall
- The Circus Tavern
- Sackville Gardens
#RenataInEngland
Another area not shown in the vlog that you should also consider visiting in Manchester: Northern Quarter
This vlog is part of a UK travel series:
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Television - Satisfaction @Free Trade Hall, Manchester, 26/5/1977
PINK FLOYD LIVE 1969-06-22 Free Trade Hall, Manchester, Lancashire #PabloFlaming #PabloFlaming2
PINK FLOYD 1969-06-22 Free Trade Hall, Manchester, Lancashire
01. Daybreak 00:00
02. Work / Afternoon 02:01
03. Doing It 03:09
04. Sleep 05:56
05. Nightmare 09:22
06. Daybreak Pt. 2 14:54
07. The Beginning 22:36
08. Beset By The Creatures Of The Deep 24:42
09. Narrow Way Pt. 3 28:04
10. Behold The Temple Of Light 35:39
11. End Of The Beginning 39:29
12. Set the Controls for the Heart of the Sun 43:13
LIVE AT THE FREE TRADE HALL, UK 78 (JUDAS PRIEST)
LIVE AT THE FREE TRADE HALL, UK 78 (JUDAS PRIEST)
MANCHESTER, UK.
01. EXCITER
02. WHITE HEAT, RED HOT
03. THE RIPPER
04. SAVAGE
05. SINNER
06. BEYOND THE REALMS OF DEATH
07. VICTIM OF CHANGES
08. BETTER BY YOU, BETTER THAN ME
09. DIAMONDS AND RUST
10. GENOCIDE
11. STARBREAKER
12. TYRANT