It was a great place to be. My friend Dave Ainsworth and I spent many happy nights there.
I remember Clive Kelly giving us a lift across town. We rode sat on the front wings of his big cadillac, holding on to the wing mirrors so we didn't fall off.
I remember:
Little Richard spraying the front row with spit as he did his set.
Screaming Jay Hawkins in his witch doctor gear.
The Drifters played late because their plane was delayed.
The Steam Packet,
Donovan,
The Gaylords who later became Marmalade,
Tony Just - top d.j.
Flake the bouncer,
David John and the Mood,
The Scaffold played one night.
The Applejacks
The Pretty Things

The Maraccas (Liverpool) who played at the Cubi |
18 December 1964
Courtesy - The British Blues
a personal recollection by Alan (Fred) Pipes
click to visit website
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If the crowd was likely to get lively, Clive Kelly would get a load of us to stand in front of the stage to keep the crowd in order. I could go on forever - it was such a great time.
Dave Earnshaw
I remember the Steam Packet. Rod Stewart, Julie Driscol, Long John and the Bian Auger Trinity. What a brilliant group.
Stephen Wolstenholme
Ii remember sunday afternoons in the Cubi - dancing and having a coffee, after saturday nights watching the Pretty Things or Them or even the Undertakers. My friend and I had to be home for 11.00. We had to catch 10.30 from Rochdale to Bury (no 19).
I wished I could have stayed all night
Susan Rothwell
I am sure I saw Ike and Tina Turner there when I was 16 - or did I dream it? Brian Auger Trinity, Julie Driscoll, Long John Baldry, Rod Stewart (were they known as Steam Packet?). Remember watching the Kinks and Georgie Fame. Frankenstein's Monsters came one night and the lead singer chased my friend into the toilets. She was terrified!!
All the mods who got to the clubs in Manchester at weekends used to come to the Cubi during the week and we'd copy the latest dance off them. As soon as we learned one, they'd bring another!
Remember someone writing to the Observer saying you couldn't see your hand in front of your face it was so dark - not true. Remember Clive Kelly and his sister.
Susan Clark
Played with support group The Trackers / Her Union from Todmorden , in the mid sixties. The best night we had was when we supported Screaming Jay Hawkins with Henry, his skull!!
Ian Godfrey
Played regularly at the Cubi club with a band called Black Cat Bones. Shared the stage with many bands who were to go on to enduring success. Stones, Kinks, Spencer Davies, Rod Stewart, Troggs and many many more. weekend all night jam sessions were awesome. Great place to be, great times.
Mike Parkes
Being 16 and playing guitar in one of the top bands in Blackpool in the early 1960’s was pretty cool, the world was our oyster even though we only made £2 per night each.
Just 30miles down the road in Preston another band David John & The Mood were also getting tremendous local and national recognition. They not only played their own brand of R&B to packed audiences they also had that icon of rock star trimmings - a van!
They were really far ahead of their time - playing Stones R&B before the Stones and influencing a whole new raft of bands and artists such as The Pretty Things and even David Bowie. Despite being acclaimed as one of the best bands in the UK and recording with the legendary Joe Meek they never quite made the big time.
My band became friends with ‘Miffy’ (David John Smith) the lead singer and also the other members of the Mood and often we would travel to Preston to hang out together.
One hot Friday night in July I caught the train to Preston with the keyboard player from my band to meet up with Miffy and the rest of the guys.
When we got there we found out that we were all going to the Cubiklub in Rochdale to see Clive Kelly and also to watch John Mayall’s Bluesbreakers, a band I had never heard off.
We pulled up outside and walked into the Cubiklub.
Kelly was there larger than life and although the club wasn’t licensed Kelly’s office which was on the left hand side as you entered the club entertained a fully stocked bar. It also served as the band dressing room.
The Cubiklub had a strange stage set up. It was almost two different stages separated by a narrow wall.
Mayall was already playing and had taken over the right hand side of the stage with his Hammond organ, box full of harmonicas and a Burns amp stuck on top of the Hammond that served as a PA system and also added a wonderful warm distortion to his harmonica playing.
On the left hand side of the stage there was a bass player, drummer and a skinny guy with a crew cut sat on a small stool playing a blonde Fender Telecaster.
The club was empty with only a few die hards hanging around.
I listened to a couple of songs from Mr.Mayall but as I couldn’t make out any of the lyrics I was a little unsure just what was going on.
It seemed a very strange little outfit, there was Mayall wailing away, the drummer was far too jazzy for my taste the guitarist looked bored and the bass player had a shit sound.
I was losing interest quickly when all of a sudden this skinny guitar player let rip.
I was totally in shock…….
Not only was he playing some really cool stuff he was bending his strings to reach notes. I had never seen or heard this kind of playing before, sure we all pushed our standard gauge strings a little, but this guy was bending like they were elastic.
My jaw must have dropped at least a foot it was like a religious experience.
I stayed to watch the whole set and followed this guitarist into the office/dressing room like a love struck idiot.
He put the Telecaster into a battered case and I just stood there looking at it as though it was the Holy Grail.
Someone shoved a beer in my hand and I finally woke up. ‘ How the f*cking hell do you bend your strings like that’ I asked the skinny one.
‘Oh it’s easy’ he replied ‘Look I’ll show you’
‘I use a banjo third instead of a standard guitar third and you can get some really terrific bends, look’
He then spent the next 30 minutes showing me how to get some great effects, up bending and down bending and allowing me to try on his guitar in-between his tuition.
He advised me to buy ‘Clifford Essex’ strings and also where to get them.
We then sat and talked guitars for about an hour before a reprise of the guitar lesson.
I thanked him, said that not only would I change my strings, I would also sell my Gretsch and buy a Fender.
When we all got back in the van to travel back to Preston I was on a high and kept telling the guys what a great guitar player Mr. Skinny was and such a really nice guy.
‘Yeah’ said Miffy 'I loved his playing I’d like to see him again his name’s……… Eric Clapton'.
I have told the story over and over again and not many believed that at 17 years old I had a one on one guitar lesson from Eric Clapton, now Kelly’s back UK I now have someone who can verify my little tale.
I have played a Fender ever since and I used Clifford Essex strings right up until they eventually invented the light gauge sets. My one-on-one with Eric changed my life.
I fortunately got to tell him and thank him again several years later.
Tony Williams
Ex Stealers Wheel
Jethro Tull
28/2/09

Clive is still pursuing the Rolling Stones to honour their committment to a show for him.
Picture taken from an Argentian newspaper
More Clive Kelly images here
I recall the opening night at the Cubi vividly !
The Stones were DEFINATELY there but never played as the place was in absolute chaos. Being a fifteen year old schoolboy at the time - (and beaten up by some of the Rockers outside as me and my mate Colin ran the gauntlet to the No. 24 bus stop to catch the last bus back home to Royton !) - it was a new eyeopening experience and we hung around the back of the club near the (coffee) bar. As the gig waned further into chaos with the Stones obviously not going to appear, out from a small door next to the bar ALL the Stones, only feet away from us, snuck out and left through a fire exit also a the back of the club.
They were DEFINATELY there !
After that was always there, as a punter or in band.
Many as mention appeared at the Cubi - one great night I remember was American blues icon John Lee Hooker backed by Manchester band Black Cat Bones.
Alan Stone
9/4/11
I was engaged to Clive's then best buddy, Jake, aka Peter Bailey. We had us a blast at the CubiKlub.
The then d.j. used to love walking around the club, after hours, in the dark, totally nude & encouraged us to do the same - said it embodied freedom!!
I followed the group"David John & The Mood" all over & wrote a weekly newssheet for the noticeboard.
Once interviewed Dave Berry, at the Jungfrau,Manchester & invited him to a party at the club but we had all forgotten about it the next week! He came & got stoned in the bandroom though & was very nice about it so I gave him my James Dean Story book.
THOSE REALLY WERE THE DAYS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Cammy Butt
11/5/11
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