The Civic Hall in
Dunstable, later renamed the Queensway, was built in 1966 and demolished to make
way for an Asda supermarket in 2000. Growing up in neighbouring Luton, which
despite its size had no decent sized music venue, the Queensway was the nearest
place where bands of any national repute came to play. Sadly I was just a little
too young to catch iconic gigs by The Sex Pistols and the Jam (October 1976 -
only 80 people were there on the Anarchy in the UK tour), The Clash (May 1977
and January 1978) and Blondie (March 1978), and when shortly after a school
friend's biker older brother took us to a couple of gigs there it was to see
ex-Deep Purple heavy metal acts Ian Gillan Band and Whitesnake. In my school
days we had to travel further afield for the good stuff, coach trips from Luton
Bus Station to Aylesbury Friars to see Echo and the Bunnymen (with Blue
Orchids, Apri 1981) or the Undertones (May 1981), or to St Albans City Hall to
see Hawkwind and Motorhead (the acceptable end of the metalist spectrum).
Still looking at
photos of the building now it has the retro-futurist appeal of a lost space age
classic and the appropriate place for gigs by Pink Floyd (February 1967 and
November 1969) and most famously of all David Bowie.
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| The Civic Centre/Queensway Hall, Dunstable |
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| Bowie in Dunstable |
On
the June 21 1972 Summer Solstice, David Bowie and the Spiders from Mars
(supported by no less than the Flamin' Groovies) played a 'Midsummer Night's
Dream' in Dunstable. Somebody filmed it, and the footage is now a Youtube
favourite for Bowie fans - the original silent images having been cleverly
synched with sound from another gig on the same tour. Songs featured include
Ziggy Stardust, Moonage Daydream, Suffragette City, Andy Warhol, Song for Bob
Dylan, Star Man, Waiting for the Man, Queen Bitch, Space Oddity, Hang onto
Yourself, and Jacques Brel's Amsterdam.

Bowie's album 'The
Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders and Mars' had been released just
two weeks earlier, on 6 June 1972. The album and tour gave rise to full scale
Bowie-mania, with an army of fans going on to imitate his Ziggy style. What's
great about this Dunstable footage is that it shows a cross section of the
audience experiencing this moment directly, plainly enraptured in many cases,
but not yet having becoming 'Bowie kids'.
So
Dunstable shoppers, next time you're in Asda pause to remember that this also
has been one of the wonderful places of the earth.
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