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Levy Beer Fête

5.0 (2 reviews)

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11 years ago

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A Carefully Planned Festival

A Carefully Planned Festival

5.0(1 review)
3.2 mi•Northern Quarter

A Carefully Planned Festival (#4) is apparently named ironically but it seemed pretty perfectly…read moreplanned to me. The website is excellent (with links to clashfinder so you can figure out how to see everything you want) and there were helpful paper schedules with timetables and act descriptions as well. A day ticket was £10 in advance, £12.15 on the day, weekend was £15/£18 and picking up the wristband from Gullivers was completely painless. Considering I saw about 11 acts in 7 hours, that's great value. There's a huge range of music from metal to electronica to singer songwriters and the website helpful sorts acts by genre, provides links to their music online and highlights some of the organiser's personal favourites. The venues are all very good as well. My personal favourite was The Castle Hotel (Uranium Lake and Sam Brooke, both brilliant) as it's a beautiful space and the sound was excellent. Gullivers (Jo Mango, amazing) was also a good space but a little warm. Soup Kitchen has an even bigger & better space but wtf is that smell? Whiskey Jar and Cord have similar tiled basement rooms but Cord was really a squeeze for what was one of my favourite acts of the evening, Jo Rose. Mint Lounge isn't the most beautiful space but is good for bigger crowds and they have Coke in glass bottles. Kraak likewise doesn't have much atmosphere, it's probably my least favourite of the spaces but was a bit quieter so good for a bit of a breather (math rock notwithstanding). The crowds weren't mega friendly (hipsters...) but there were no dicks either. Overall, highly highly recommended and I already look forward to next year! If you happen to be reading this on Sunday 19 October 2014, stop immediately and head straight to the NQ to experience for yourself!

Manchester Gin Festival - The off-licence

Manchester Gin Festival

5.0(2 reviews)
1.4 mi•Longsight

The UK's largest Gin Festival returned to Manchester at the beautiful Victoria Baths. The last time…read moreI was here was coincidentally for another booze-related festival, IndyManBeerCon (http://www.indymanbeercon.co.uk/) so I knew the setting was going to be an impressive one. Tickets are sold through Eventbrite and sell out incredibly quickly so don't delay when they become available for purchase. On arrival you're handed your festival glass (which you can keep as a memento) and a small brochure full of information on the 80 different gins you can try. You need drinks tokens to buy the gin (the bars don't accept cash) and you can get these at the desk inside the main hall. These worked out at £5 per drink and included Fever Tree tonic and a garnish. As we did, most people opted to buy a card of four drinks for £20, but you can buy fewer tokens if you like. There are four bars down both sides of the main hall (labelled A to D) and they mirror each other so two of every bottle is available to ease queuing times. I'd never tried a fruit gin before but the Rhubarb & Ginger from Edinburgh Gin Distillery was the best of all the gins I tried that evening. Gorgeous served neat and delicate with tonic added. I'm definitely buying a bottle! There's live entertainment in the food hall and a series of talks from gin industry experts in some of the smaller side rooms but we didn't attend any of those. One of the highlights was the Meet the Distillers area inside another of the pool rooms. Here about ten or so different gin makers had stalls where you could chat to them about their wares, try some samples and learn about where you could purchase a bottle or get a drink of their product in Manchester. It was a fantastic event to attend; we learned a lot more about one of our favourite tipples and we'll absolutely be back here next year with our gin-loving friends.

What an amazing event. I really enjoyed my afternoon at the Manchester Gin Festival yesterday…read more Tickets for this event sold out in days so we felt lucky to be there. We were greeted by a friendly gin enthusiast who advised us on which gins to try, we also received a stylish gin festival glass as a keepsake. The event was organised over 3 rooms. The first being made up of 4 bars serving loads of different gins. You had to peruse the extensive programme to decide what to try and buy their token cards at £20 for 4 tokens so you could get a drink. A particularly good find for me was the rhubarb and ginger gin which I could happily drink by the bucket load it was that good. The next room was the tasting room where for free you could try a selection of different gins and listen to talks by their makers. I loved the sloe gin and the blackcurrant gin and it was good to taste a wide sample of high quality gins. The final room was the master class room where you could listen to in-depth talks about how gin is made and its history. There were also gin based cocktails on offer too. All this amongst the truly stunning and historic setting of Victoria Baths which couldn't be beaten as a venue.

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Manchester Gin Festival - Just half of one of the 4 gin bars

Just half of one of the 4 gin bars

Manchester Gin Festival
Manchester Gin Festival - There is a distillers room where you can try & learn about lots of different gins

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There is a distillers room where you can try & learn about lots of different gins

Manchester Jazz Festival - The festival hub and outside seating

Manchester Jazz Festival

4.0(2 reviews)
3.2 mi

I am currently loving the Manchester Jazz Festival. Not that I'm a big jazz listener, though I can…read morebe found frequenting Matt & Phred's from time to time, but the whole atmosphere at this event is just great. The main hub is located on Albert Square, with food and drink a-plenty. Understand why I like it so much now? Working just across the road, I have been for three days in a row - and planning on going for more. We've been just for drinks, but also for food, and every experience has been the same. Laid back, not too damaging on the wallet, and just plain tasty. The bar is a bit slow on service, with some of the bartenders seeming as if they've been drafted in from every role but bartending, but once you're sat in the sun spot of Manchester it's hard to stay annoyed. They take cards behind the bar, which is very handy. Despite serving wine by the bottle, you can't take this out on to the square - wine in a pint glass anyone? Although I understand the need for this rule, they haven't thought it through and provided anything other than an empty Pimm's jug or pint glasses. The food is from Woody's pizza, street wraps, and Chaophraya. I've had the pizza - £6 for plain, £7 for ones with toppings - which totally hit the spot after a slightly heavier night than intended the day before. I'll certainley be trying the thai, reasonably priced at circa £5 for a main portion. Albert Square is the perfect hub for this kind of event, and this is a great taster for the upcoming Food and Drink Festival.

The Manchester Jazz Festival is a great event currently being held in Albert Square. There is a…read morefestival pavilion stage where jazz bands of all genres play for a small ticket price. There are also food stalls selling high quality food including Chaporaya and Woody's pizza. There is a reasonably stocked bar but be aware the service is quite slow and lots of seating in the form of wooden benches. The atmosphere was great when we went down there to watch the Jonathan Silk Big Band. We thoroughly enjoyed the concert and it was well worth the £5 entry fee to watch 20 or so talented jazz musicians play some fabulous music. I hope this event comes back to Manchester next year.

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Manchester Jazz Festival - Manchester Jazz Festival main stage

Manchester Jazz Festival main stage

Manchester Jazz Festival - Woody's pizza (2014)

Woody's pizza (2014)

Manchester Jazz Festival - Thai green and chicken satay (2014)

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Thai green and chicken satay (2014)

Chorlton Beer & Cider Festival

Chorlton Beer & Cider Festival

4.0(1 review)
3.7 mi•Chorlton

Organised by the Trafford and Hulme branch of CAMRA in the surrounds of St Clement's Church in…read moreChorlton, this proved to be an exceptionally popular and well-organised festival. Though a sizeable queue had formed before the gates opened at 6pm, their fast-track ticket booth (where for £10 you received your hand stamp, glass, programme and £4 worth of beer tokens) meant you could hit the first bar within moments of entry. Additional tokens were available in £5 & £10 denominations from the beer token tent. There were four bars within the venue: the World Beers Bar and Out of Town Bar (both inside the church building), the Manchester Brewers' Bar and Traditional Cider & Perry bar within the grounds. Lots of seating under the cover of marquees (some could have done with a jet-washing it has to be said), but they proved very useful when the few hours of dry mildish summer weather was interrupted by rain. Food offerings were provided by some top street food traders. On the Friday session there were All About Pies, Fire & Salt BBQ and Tampopo. These were payment by cash only. Entertainment came in the form of Twisted Tubes, an excellent local band performing pop and jazz covers with their saxaphone, trumpets, trombone, sousaphone and percussion instruments. There were some minor annoyances - the queues for food were long at times given there were only three stalls for 100s of people; none of the volunteers seemed to be on rubbish duty so food trays were blowing everywhere or being left piled on tables; and there were no refunds on beer glasses (if you didn't want to keep them). Overall it was a really enjoyable night, more so for the fact we bagged a table early on. The beer selection was extensive and it was great to have a bar dedicated to local breweries. Tip: any unused value on your tokens at the end of the night can be returned to the token tent for a refund or you can hand it in as a donation to the church.

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Chorlton Beer & Cider Festival
Chorlton Beer & Cider Festival - Twisted Tubes, rocking it

Twisted Tubes, rocking it

Chorlton Beer & Cider Festival

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Levy Beer Fête - festivals - Updated May 2026

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