The University of Salford has confirmed that live music will be returning to its hallowed venue Maxwell Hall this Bank Holiday Sunday, as it hosts Sounds from the Other City festival on the Peel Park campus. For the first time since 2014, the legendary music venue will host live music from external bands as it partially hosts Salford’s biggest music festival on Sunday 5 May.
Welsh artist Gruff Rhys will headline a set at the venue, joining past legendary musicians including Paul McCartney, U2, The Smiths and Blondie who have performed on the stage, which will also host the festival’s joyous afterparty in the evening, featuring A Guy Called Gerald.
The festival, now in its 18th year, will be held across six venues on the campus, including Peel Hall, the Salford Museum & Art Gallery, the recently-refurbished Old Fire Station, the Working Class Movement Library and a stage on Heritage Lawn off The Crescent.
Special projects that will be showcased on the day include ‘The Conductor‘ by Mishka Henner − ‘channel[ing] all the world’s thunder strikes’ as a single percussionist will beat a drum each time a lightning strike is recorded − in the Reverberation Chamber in the Newton Building.
In addition, multi-instrumentalist Ray Aggs will take part in the Samarbeta Music residency at Islington Mill that will see them create an album and live performance of new folk songs. They will be inviting local people of colour to take part in an educational guitar workshop and improvised songwriting, focused on the nature of ‘roots’ music, appropriation, belonging, identity and the black diaspora.
Ray will also deliver an artist talk and discussion on Decolonising Folk Music at the Working Class Movement Library, and the week will culminate in a live premiere performance of new music at SFTOC.
Tim France, Director of Performance, Music, English & Dance at The University of Salford, said: “We are absolutely delighted to bring live music back to the stage of our beloved Maxwell Hall. Sounds from the Other City is one of Salford’s most impactful and colourful musical spectacles and it is fitting that this year’s festival will mark the first time that bands have took to the stage there in ten years.
“It is a hallowed stage that has played host to some of the world’s biggest bands and will forever have a space in our city’s illustrious musical history, but it is time that live music returns there and we are tremendously excited to see it return as a venue for this festival and to see music showcased across our campus this May. From Peel Hall to the stunningly-refurbished Old Fire Station, the University of Salford will be the place to be this coming Bank Holiday Weekend for music lovers across Greater Manchester.”
Mark Carlin, Director and Founder of Sounds from the Other City, said: “After almost a decade of working with the University of Salford, we’re thrilled to be moving the heart of the festival onto the campus for the first time this year. That means we’ll be hosting a stage at the historic Maxwell Hall, the first time anyone’s had the chance to do that in ten years and we’ll also be setting up at Peel Hall and the newly established Old Fire Station cafe.”
Sounds from the Other City has held stages at the University of Salford several times over the last 20 years, previously hosting live stages at Peel Hall (2011 & 2014) and a one-off performance installation at Maxwell Hall for the festival’s tenth edition in 2014. The festival planned to return to the hallowed venue in 2020, but the event was cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
Over 110 University of Salford students have gained valuable work experience at Sounds from the Other City through placements since 2017, with some going onto careers with BBC Music, Worldwide FM, London Sinfonietta and more.
In addition to being hosted on our campus, this year’s festival will also occupy areas across the wider Chapel Street area with artists to play at St Philip’s Church, The Old Pint Pot, The New Oxford, Bexley Square, Porta and Islington Mill.
Tickets for the festival are on sale now here.