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The boss of the London venue The Clapham Grand has said that they are going ahead with plans to hold more socially distanced gigs in the near future.
The south London venue hosted Frank Turner for a government-backed trial show last month, although manager Ally Wolf later admitted that the pilot “did not succeed” in providing a blueprint for the return of live music in the coronavirus era.
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Read more: “It’s a moment in history” — on the scene at the first Government-backed socially distanced gig
Despite that bleak outlook, Wolf has now said that the Clapham Grand is aiming to continue hosting reduced capacity shows under the current restrictions, and they’ve already started taking bookings for September onwards.
“No one is going to be able to tour on any level for at least six months,” Wolf told Music Week. “Even after that I don’t know if it’s going to be back to where it was, so I feel like people need to get their heads around doing stuff that’s a bit different.
“And if it means that you can bring people back to work, people can come out and enjoy shows, and acts can play, then surely that’s better than everyone being sat at home? I would be a fool not to try and actually make this work, otherwise I might as well just be burning 50 grand a month without having a venue.”
Wolf said that the Turner trial gig “was a beautiful thing” despite the subsequent media focus on his comments about the financial aspect of staging socially distanced shows.
“But the Clapham Grand is an incredibly versatile space,” Wolf added. “I can sell 200 table tickets for a show and make it work for live music, comedy, drag, movies… Multiple event formats fit in the venue because of the nature of its design.
“It’s really important for the venue to be able to bring the industry onside because I want to bring concerts back. Otherwise I might just burn half a million pounds and come back in Easter, by which point there will be no venue to come back to and everything will have dropped off a cliff.”
Wolf confirmed that the Clapham Grand has applied for funding from the Arts Council to refurbish their upper circle, which would enable the venue’s socially distanced capacity to be upped by 100.
“There’s not a one-size-fits-all solution here, but I’ve certainly got the capability to deliver an incredibly safe experience for customers, who have been starved of something they’re dying to watch again, and give acts the platform to play live again in a really good venue that actually feels like a show,” he said.
“So let’s get something going, let’s get some acts in, try and bring some agents on board. Let’s try and work with some promoters and bring people’s heads around to an ‘in between’ stage of live music that doesn’t have to be shrouded in the financial doom and gloom of the bigger picture because, ultimately, all the customers want is a night out.”
On the future of small UK music venues such as the Clapham Grand, Wolf added: “The people that are going to get ahead in this game now are either the people that are incredibly rich and can ride it out, or the people who are going to innovate and try and build back from the ground up.
“And that, I feel, is what the next step is for the Grand — and I’m sure it’s probably the next step for a lot of people.”
Last weekend, the owner of Edinburgh venue Sneaky Pete’s criticised the Scottish government after it recommended that live venues, clubs and bars be prohibited from playing background music in their premises.
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