Feeling My Age

Getting older has its drawbacks – but it's a lot better than the alternative.

In October 1967 I saw blues guitarist Freddie King perform here with Chicken Shack - who were both his opening act and backing band. Freddie himself is long dead - killed by a heart attack in 1976 according to Wikipedia at the age of 42. Chicken Shack continues to this day, fronted as ever by guitarist Stan Webb. Their keyboard player back in 1967 was Christine Perfect, who subsequently married John McVie, joined Fleetwood Mac and moved to LA in the early 70s. The rest is legend. The gig was rammed and took place in the upstairs room at the Manor House pub - after which the nearby tube station was named. Today, a sign is offering that first floor venue on leasehold as a standalone nightclub. It was something of a shock to see that the main pub premises is now a CostCutter supermarket. Similar oblivion has overtaken nearly all the other legendary London venues of the 1960s - the Marquee, Speakeasy, Scotch of St James, Crawdaddy, Bag o’ Nails… Even the last survivor - the venerable 100 Club, slap bang in the heart of central London - has only just been reprieved thanks to a last minute intervention by Sir Paul Macca. It makes me wonder whether there’ll be similar campaigns to save the Camden Barfly, Lexington, Buffalo Bar, 93 Feet East, Dublin Castle and The Old Blue Last in another 40 years’ time, fronted by the likes of Sir Mike Skinner or Sir Pete Doherty. We’ll never know. Well, you might - but I won't. Like the magnificent Freddie, I’ll very definitely have left the building by then... Freddie King

7 Comments

  1. Nick Lawson on August 8, 2014 5:54 pm

    I was there on that night to see the late great Freddy King!! Great memories! I was only 19 at the time, but already hooked on the Blues

  2. brian stracey on December 28, 2015 7:36 pm

    HAD…you been there in the early sixties you would have heard a stringy unkempt youth singing occasionally with jimmy powell & the 5 dimensions…

  3. Stevie King on January 31, 2016 10:56 am

    I also saw Freddie King at the Manor House, I think in 1967? His support group/backing band then was Savoy Brown, with Chris Youlden on vocals. If anyone can put a date to that gig, I’d be pleased to hear about it!

  4. Russell Spicer on January 16, 2018 10:26 am

    Saw Long John Baldry here on the early 60s, with Rod Stewart on backing vocals. Halfway through the gig I noticed one of the 4×12 speakers was falling off the wobbly table it was standing on. It was about to hit Rod on the head so I stepped forward and stopped it. Not sure whether I did the world any favours but it did save Rod going to A and E.

  5. Tony Barnard on May 19, 2019 7:13 pm

    I was also there, but it was October 1967. I have the ticket stub from Freddie’s Saville Theatre gig dated 15th October, which I’d been at just a few days earlier. He also played just down the road at The Hornsey Wood Tavern shortly after. He had stage presence in bucket-loads. How privileged I was.

  6. feelingmyage on October 10, 2019 4:20 pm

    Brilliant Tony – thanks so much. I’ve corrected the copy accordingly. Reckon we were all pretty privileged!

  7. john Bernard Edward maskell on July 23, 2020 9:28 pm

    Hi All,
    I appeared at The Manor House with a group I had just started singing with called Johnny & The Bobcats. To my surprise the main act was The Hollies, little known at the time but a great group.

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