Sunday, 7 September 2008

And the beat goes on

This weekend feels like the first in ages that I've spent in Liverpool. So I decided to re-discover the city I live in, instead of rushing around the country. On Saturday I went to see The Beat Goes On, an exhibition about Liverpool's music scene, at the World Museum. It's the whole world... in a museum! Nearly. There's a planetarium, aquarium, bug house and bee hive.
The exhibition focused on Liverpool music since the 1950s, through Merseybeat and super-clubs, right up to Hot Club de Paris. It was a sensory overload of memorabilia, buttons to press, pictures and a pretend stage to play inflatable guitars on. Also, being one of those cool, new wave museums, a lot of the bits and bobs on display were personal artifacts... nightclub fliers from the Cream glory days, a spangly outfit worn by a drag queen to G-Bar, a tin robot used on the cover of 'Tin Planet' by Space.
Here are the photographs I took before security asked me to stop:
Pete Burns
Guitar: the easiest instrument
Abi Harding, Billy Fury, Mel C and Vernon Kay Half an hour well spent. Obviously, some of it felt a bit self-interested ('Liverpool is amazing! We made The Beatles! We invented music! Did we mention, we're also European Capital of Culture 2008?'). But it was interesting. Looking at the past made me feel more than ever that Liverpool doesn't have a particularly strong music or club scene at the moment. There are some good venues, good bands and good promoters doing good things, but definitely not on the same scale as cities like Leeds or Glasgow.

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