The Sheffield Live Music Scene
You would expect a city with a large university student population to have some dance venues and other live music Venues that cater to a young crowd. To say that about Sheffield is an extreme understatement. The vibrant live music scene in the city has been the soundtrack to life for citizens of Sheffield for over 30 years.
Past and present Sheffield artists have enjoyed great success. Names from the not too distant past include Joe Cocker, Pulp’s Jarvis Cocker, Def Leppard, The Human League to name a few. More recently the Arctic Monkeys, Pink Grease, and The Long Blonds are surprisingly popular in and outside of Sheffield. The live music Venue s, such as club s, pubs, venue s, and stadiums fill the air with music, and vibrate the cities streets with a baseline.
So many skill ed acts come from Sheffield that’s seems an odd coincidence. Perhaps something in the water that advocates vocal cords develop, not like ly, but something has to explain the large volume of artists coming out of this fairly small area. Well, it’s not that extensive of a mystery.
It seems that in the early 1980s when the steel industry was on a down turn, a person on the Sheffield City Council heard about the extensive money involved in music. The multi-million dollar incomes of rock stars looked like an attractive way to bring many money into the city. By 1982, a year that saw double-digit unemployment rates and 20,000 jobs lost, the City Council decided to do something about it by producing a few rock stars of their own.
It might not have occurred quite that way, but the fact is, the council got involved in the music business. They figured out that to have a great income producing music scene a few things were needed. An infrastructure for the music business was necessary, so the Council began funding projects associated with music. A recording studio was required to attract top acts and lot of live music Venues were required to showcase the local skill.
Sheffield City Trust owns Sheffield International Venues and operates Hallam FM Arena, and Sheffield City Hall to name a few of the 13 Venues for music, sports, and entertainment. (SVI) Sheffield International Venues vision is to encourage Sheffield as an international and cultural center point for sport, leisure and entertainment, something they have been quite successful at doing since 1988.
Red Tape Studios is a training website for Sheffield City Council. It offers training to individuals interested in careers in the music business. band Development, band and Artist management, Music Technology, Music Business Courses and even DJ training courses are available. Because these courses are part of a local government backed system, they are competitively priced and the program really advocates encourage the music scene in Sheffield.
Of course the City Council offers other training units. Aspiring caterers, ( If the re is such a thing) might train at Sheaf Training alongside aspiring construction workers and customer service representatives. Tritec PC Training is the City Council’s IT training ground and every city has at least one of these. The fact that the city recognizes and encourages popular music is just so surp increasing, and what is more sensational and surp increasing is how well it works.
That answers the question how one small area might create so many skill ed artist s. Not really a mystery, it’s more of a plan. Council backing is only a small part of the music scene however, and the Venues that have been committed to increasing the live music scene for the past twenty five or thirty years deserve much of the credit as well.
The Leadmill celebrated its silver anniversary in 2005, and has grown from a derelict flour mill in a rundown part of the city during the last stages of the steel industry’s demise. Unemployment and hopelessness was the consensus among young individuals at the time. A group of volunteers, students, artist s, and unemployed individuals, who described themselves as “insane but likable” came together to performance up a center for arts and music for individuals like themselves who had nowhere to go.
The Leadmill has grown into a landmark, and the live music has grown legendary. The opening in 1980 of what was a performing arts center with jazz, pop bands, theatre, education workshops, and club evenings began a tradition of live music that Venues the world over have tried to emulate. The “insane but likable” founders turned out to be visionaries, except when they turned down a strange young blonde girl for a show in 1983 who turned out to be Madonna. But who would have thought a club where the toilets backed up onto the dance floor would do so well. It is not the bricks and mortar, but the artists and the experiences of the individuals who have been there time and time again that are memorable. The Leadmill is a launching pad for stars in the music business, and the place to see up and coming artists in Sheffield.
The Leadmill is of course not the only famous live music Venue in town, and is just one of the great live Venue s. There’s a club in Sheffield for whatever your taste is. Live Music, DJ & MC stuff, techno, synthpop, independent poppunk, and whatever other combinations of music are left over are represented somewhere in the city. Starting from a forward thinking city council and bright young individuals who love music, the city of Sheffield has been producing artists like other cities create butchers for the past 30 years.