20 Years Of Breaking Bands: Nottingham’s Bodega Celebrates Birthday Weekender

The Bodega
– The Bodega
Located in Nottingham, England

The Bodega, one of DHP Family’s venues in Nottingham, England, is celebrating its well-earned reputation for breaking bands with a 20th birthday weekender.
 
Artists who have passed through the intimate 220-capacity room over the last 20 years include The Strokes, The White Stripes, Arctic Monkeys, The xx, Scissor Sisters, Florence + The Machine, The 1975, Easy Life and Slowthai.
Bodega’s Sam Keirl said: “It’s crazy to think of bands playing to a couple of hundred people in Nottingham and then a couple of years later they can be headlining Glastonbury. It’s very exciting to see who will be next! With a gig on most nights, we see a lot of amazing bands, some go on to huge things and some stay underground hidden gems.”
Scenes from when The Strokes first played the Bodega
Paul Ross/Tom Charlton
– Scenes from when The Strokes first played the Bodega
The Nottingham institution has been around for 20 years

 
Now, the Bodega is marking its 20th birthday with a series of shows and DJ sets, including performances by The Orielles (Nov. 28), Stealing Sheep (Nov. 30), and Nottingham’s owns Kagoule (Dec. 1). 
 
Cai Burns of Kagoule said: “We feel very honoured to have been asked to headline The Bodega 20th anniversary show alongside some of our favourite Nottingham bands. It has been a kind of spiritual home for us over the years and has been an integral part of ours, and many others, growth as musicians. We are truly looking forward to celebrating its legacy on 1st December.”
Another local band that benefited from having The Bodega on its doorstep is Amber Run, who are about to tour the U.S. Venues include the 1,000-cap Warsaw in Brooklyn, NY, and the 1,150-capacity First Avenue in Minneapolis, MN.
On its last visit to those cities in Dec. 2018, the Amber run sold out 400 tickets for a Brooklyn performance at Baby’s All Right, grossing $7,800, according to Pollstar box office data. In Minneapolis, the band visited The Cedar Cultural Center, Dec. 14, 2018, selling out 625 tickets, grossing $8,750.
Update: Amber Run’s agent for North America, Erik Selz of Paradigm Talent Agency, told Pollstar: “The band’s late 2018 run through the Northeast and Midwest was on the backside of their last album/tour cycle, in 350- to 750-cap rooms, and really outperformed expectations, especially given that this was Amber Run’s first trip to North America.  On the heels of their excellent new album Philophobia, we were confident in upping the ante into 500- to 1500-cap spaces.”
The 1975 at the Bodega
– The 1975 at the Bodega
The venue saw many big names pass through its doors when they weren

Talking about Amber Run, DHP Family’s director of live Anton Lockwood told VenuesNow: “I saw them many times in the early days – indeed rumor has it that they are named for a bartender at the Bodega called Amber! You have to ask them about that one though! They recently played Rock City and the show was a triumph, with a real sense of mutual love between the band and Nottingham.”
 
Lockwood was referring to another one of DHP Family’s Nottingham venues, one that has been around for almost twice as long as the Bodega: Rock City, which started it all for DHP in 1980. Thus, next year will mark the venues 40th anniversary. 
Rock City has the same reputation for hosting bands before they blew up, Rage Against the Machine, Pearl Jam, and Marilyn Manson come to mind.
George Akins
– George Akins
Managing director of DHP Family

DHP Family MD George Akins told VenuesNow, “at that time I wasn’t thinking about anything other than Rock City so if someone had said I’d have multiple venues at all sorts of sizes  I’d probably have told them to fuck off! Where would I find the time to do that?”

Speaking about the biggest challenge when it comes to producing future headliners in grassroots venues, he said, “just keeping the venues profitable given all the charges they are facing just to open the doors. Plus, with certain artists we have issues with licensing and police, which we never experienced in the past.”
Akins also touched on the biggest opportunity: “there are so many bands looking to break and they need grassroots venues with credibility to help break them.”
DHP also runs Rescue Rooms, and the Stealth club in Nottingham. Outside its hometown, DHP operates the Thekla in Bristol and London venues Oslo (Hackney) and The Garage (Islington). DHP also runs Manchester Cathedral’s music programme.
This article first appeared on VenuesNow.