Location | Brixton, London, England |
---|---|
Coordinates | 51°27′14″N0°07′19″W / 51.45383°N 0.12191°W |
Opened | 1990s |
Website | |
www.windmillbrixton.co.uk |
The Windmill is a pub and live music venue in Brixton, London, England, with a reputation for championing new music. [1] [2] It was voted the third best music venue in London, in a 2012 poll in Time Out magazine, [2] and #7 by The Guardian in 2008, [3] and has been described as "one of the top-10 music venues in the U.K.". [4]
The pub was built in 1971 for the adjacent Blenheim Gardens housing estate. It was named after the neighbouring heritage site of the only lasting (and working) windmill (aka Ashby's Mill) in the London area. It went through various phases of being a bar that attracted locals, bikers, and the Irish community; by the end of the 1990s, it was hosting DJs, poets and the occasional live bands. [5] Around 2002, the Windmill shifted focus onto live music. Early gigs included a semi-secret double bill of Calexico and Kurt Wagner (of Lambchop) followed by a gig by The 5.6.7.8's, just after they had appeared as the house band in Quentin Tarantino's Kill Bill: Volume 2 . [5] A Rottweiler dog living on the roof of the venue (known as "Roof Dog") became the Windmill's mascot, until its death in August 2015. [6]
Bands to have played gigs at The Windmill include: …And You Will Know Us By The Trail Of Dead, [5] Bloc Party, [3] Caitlin Rose, [5] The Crimea, [3] Damo Suzuki, [7] Guillemots, [3] Hot Chip, [1] Los Campesinos, [3] Scritti Politti, [5] Sorry, [8] Stereolab, [5] and The Vaccines. [5] [6] In recent years, the venue has been connected with a resurgence of the South London guitar rock scene, due to frequent shows there by bands such as Black Country, New Road, Squid, the Fat White Family, and Black Midi, the latter being a resident act from 2018 onwards. [9] [10]
Brixton is an area of South London, part of the London Borough of Lambeth, England. The area is identified in the London Plan as one of 35 major centres in Greater London. Brixton experienced a rapid rise in population during the 19th century as communications with central London improved.
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Kenji Suzuki, known as Damo Suzuki (ダモ鈴木), was a Japanese musician best known as the vocalist for the German Krautrock group Can between 1970 and 1973. Born in 1950 in Kobe, Japan, he moved to Europe in the late 1960s where he was spotted busking in Munich, West Germany, by Can bassist Holger Czukay and drummer Jaki Liebezeit. Can had just split with their vocalist Malcolm Mooney, and asked Suzuki to sing over tracks from their 1970 compilation album Soundtracks. Afterwards, he became their full time singer, appearing on the three influential albums Tago Mago (1971), Ege Bamyası (1972) and Future Days (1973).
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The Montague Arms was a music venue located at 289 Queens Road, in the Telegraph Hill ward of Lewisham, on the borders of Peckham and New Cross in south-east London from 1967 until 2018. The pub venue was known for its eccentric decor; which at some point included old fishing-boat lights, a 19th Century carriage containing a stuffed zebra, and an old diving suit.
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Sorry is an English indie rock band from North London. The band members are Asha Lorenz, Louis O'Bryen, Lincoln Barrett, Campbell Baum and Marco Pini. The band's debut studio album, 925, was released in 2020, following the release of several mixtapes and singles.
The Japanese musician Damo Suzuki performed on the following incomplete list of albums and soundtracks:
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