I'm not a pub person, I'm a gig person, and I found this venue totally unsuitable for watching a live act.
First of all, how do so many venues survive when the basic skill of answering a phone is ignored? I work most evenings and need to know exactly when to finish (I live a distance away) so knowing the run times is vital to me, yet Gullivers don't have the common decency to answer either the mobile number on Facebook nor the landline featured on Google - this is at 6:30, 7:10 and 8:20 on a gig night. If those are the wrong numbers, change them. The Ruby Lounge suffers from the same malaise - kudos to places like the Ritz, Academy and Apollo for PUBLISHING run times on Facebook etc. It doesn't take a lot of effort, does it?
It's right in the city centre, so plenty of pay car parks, or you may drop lucky and get street parking - we did, right behind the building
The music venue is an upstairs room at a pub, no more. It's a small, rectangular room with a 12" (literally) stage. So get there early, stand at the front and don't go to the bar or the bathroom for four hours and you'll see something. Otherwise, be eight feet tall or all you'll see is the back of punters' heads', especially if the act sits down, as Jessica Pratt did when I "saw" her. Sound was fine, but it was a girl and an acoustic guitar, so....the audience was quiet and respectful - one or two people pushing their way to the front and a gaggle of people who decided to SIT DOWN on the floor in front of the stage, which was good for views but bad inasmuch as people thought there was a space and kept pushing their way through only to stumble over the blissed-out sitters-down.
The gig finished early and I stopped downstairs for a drink at the bar. Nice pub, very good music and decent clientele. Two people behind the bar, very adept at avoiding eye contact as they did that "playing draughts with empty bottles and glasses" thing to appear busy. I was the only customer at the bar but it took a good couple of minutes even to receive acknowledgement of my existence.
I phone a place, or I stand at the bar, because I want to give them my business, to hand my money over to them. Too many places don't see it that way - they see customers as an irritation, something to be dodged if possible. On my one visit to Gullivers, it appears to fall into that camp. I will have to be absolutely desperate to see someone before I return there for a gig. read more