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The Tills Are Alive With The Sound of Music... Boroman’s Top 20 Sheffield Music Pubs

Let’s face it Sheffield is a musical City and this is reflected in the number of pubs and bars hosting live music. From City Wine Bars with all the ambience of an Airport Lounge to Local Pubs as welcoming as a fart in a spacesuit we’ve got the lot. In fact most of the pubs in the City Centre have music of some sort, apart from drunken locals auditioning for the X-Factor. Even the tattoo parlours have music rehearsal rooms to hire – see pic below. Those below are distinct in that they are primarily drinking dens that host music rather than dedicated music venues like the City Hall, Memorial Hall, O2 Academy, Leadmill and the Plug. My mate Colin goes to every gig in Sheffield so we don’t have to go to these places to get the low down. Many of those mentioned also boast a fine selection of beers, lagers, alchopops, and spirits, unlike the aforementioned music “venues” who usually charge a Kings ransom for flat tasteless “cooking” lager you can get at the local supermarket for a 5th of the price. This also isn’t an exhaustive list by any means as there are new ones opening up I haven’t visited yet such as Maggie Mays but these are some of my favourites, in no particular order.

The Dove and Rainbow – Arguably Sheffield’s sleaziest rock bar, some would call it “atmospheric” some would call it a shit hole. Even the arms of the chairs have got tattoo’s on them etc etc. It’s a one room bar with pool table at one end and a stage at the other, with pinball tables and a fag machine. Has a small selection of Real Ales, along with generic lagers and alchopops. Good range of live music though obviously leaning towards the heavier end of the rock spectrum. There is nowt like a bit of Death Metal with your “Devil’s Butthole” (5% ABV) and pork scratchings. Also has an excellent juke box. Was in there one lunchtime and a couple of ladies well into their seventies were grooving to Led Zeppelin. “Stairway to Heaven” suddenly had much more resonance. Avoid the toilets if at all possible though as they are what you would expect to see on a French Farm.

The Greystones – This has taken up the mantle of the much missed “Boardwalk” as one of Sheffield’s premier music venues but it’s out of town location and relatively small stage/music room is a slight drawback. There is live entertainment every night, covering every type of music, including regular visits from the best of British and internationally established “turns”. They also have stand-up comedy and poetry recitals too. I believe Shabba & Thomo are carrying on their double act there next week. In the car park. It’s a Thornbridge pub, so has an excellent selection of real ales. A quality venue, Flip Chorale & Los Macabros and Tora,Tora,Tora, would be at home here. Chuck Prophet is playing here in April. Get in there.

Bath Hotel - Small but perfectly formed, two-room corner pub in the City Centre. The black & white tiled floor is reminiscent of a Victorian parlour and the place may still be frequented by the odd chimney sweep, cut-purse & bootblack. Time moves slowly in Yorkshire. The back room is often home to literary and poetry groups discussing the latest cultural and philosophical events so none of the Stags have actually been in there. The equally small “main” room has a dart board resulting in many a patron sporting an arrow through the noggin’ before closing time. They do occasional gigs, mainly Jazz, Blues and Folk. Not much room for anything more than a duo so be prepared for the odd violin bow in the kisser. Has an excellent range of real ales with an ever changing menu for the connoisseur or visiting piss artist. I can just see Martin “The Goal Machine” smoking one of his trademark Fidel’s whilst quaffing a pint of “Goal Hanger” (3% ABV.)

University Arms -. Upper class establishment as the name suggests. You have to wear a tuxedo to get in the lounge. Usually full, that is full of student types paying for a bag of crisps at the bar with a credit card. Don’t attempt the pub quiz, it’s harder than Mastermind I can tell you. It boasts a fine selection of Acorn Brewery and guest ales. They do occasionally have live music of an eclectic variety, jazz, folk, world music as you would expect. All rather sedate mind you, nothing too loud and snotty. Don’t expect to see The Bollock Brothers there anytime soon.

Frog and Parrot - A famous City Centre pub, one of the earliest real ale haunts and home to the legendary “Roger and Out” a beer so strong they only serve it in halves and Thomo gets squiffy after five pints. Was in here one night in the early nineties with some mates from Boro, and during some sort of confrontation about “protection” some local toughs smashed all the bottles and optics behind the bar, then nonchalantly walked out. Bit of a fuss to make about the condom machines I thought. Canny boozer me mates said without a hint of irony. This is a well-established music venue with regular live bands and solo performances. Ten Beers After’ Bass Ace, Funky Paul is a regular performer here. Also hosts an annual Frogstock Festival with performers on all day over a weekend. Bring a guitar and you can serenade the attendant throng with your reggae version of “If I Said You Had A Beautiful Body Would You Hold It Against Me” whilst supping a pint of “British Bulldogs Bollocks” (5% ABV).

Fagin’s - A small local just down from West Street. Like a typical Dublin Bar (without the fighting) with live “sessions” most nights apart from Thursday when they have a quiz. (Don’t attempt this. It makes the University Arms Quiz look like a shopping list. One of the questions went “Here’s an atom, now split it”) Musicianship is of the highest standard but it’s very welcoming for the beginner too. As befits a proper pub session, there are lots of fiddles, acoustic guitars, accordions and mandolin (thanks Trev). “Dead Flowers” very own Duncan also hosts sessions on a Saturday so you are guaranteed superb Tom Petty covers amongst the musical excellence. One night after a few Guinness’ I actually had the bottle to get up and sing “Long Black Veil” by Johnny Cash. The subsequent restraining order means I can’t go back in there until 2015. Choice of ales is limited but excellently kept and the home-made food is second to none. It’s a regular haunt of genuine music legend and gentleman Richard Hawley, who often holds court in the tiny “snug” next to the bar.

The Forum – Trendy bar and eatery. The décor outside hints at Antonio Gaudi but this isn’t the Ramblas, unless the Ramblas is an open piece of waste ground full of skateboarders and winos. Food is excellent though service can be slow as the staff enjoy posing, seeming to think they are working in Hollywood and will be picked up anytime soon. “Come on love, where’s me chips???” To cement its reputation as a trendy bar sometimes shows movies, mainly obscure World Cinema, usually in black and white with subtitles. You won’t see “Legally Blonde” here I’m afraid. They also host the occasional gig. Colin saw Vintage Trouble there recently and said they were awesome with their lead singer blasting it out whilst standing on the bar. Mind you if he’d have spilt Col’s pint he would have chinned him. Patrons are the trend setters of Sheffield so expect to see plenty of “Man Bags” and I don’t mean those you hold whilst taking a piss. Small selection of on tap real ales but mainly bottles. You can strike a shape clutching a bottle of “Laslo Piss” Polish Lager (20% ABV).

Walkabout Bar – Much like its slightly skuzzier chain “cousin” Weatherspoons, you know what you are getting in a Walkabout and this one is no exception. Converted from an old Church the building itself is impressive and very spacious it is too with an upper level containing church pews for seats and a massive organ (oooh eeer missus) overlooking the bar area. The whole thing is uncannily like the “House of Blues” in New Orleans but that’s another story. It has massive screens for sporting events and the usual range of beers, mainly of the generic lager variety. You know the “F” word, Bud and Red Stripe, all brewed in the same bucket methinks. Decent and cheap food to act as belly ballast whilst you spend a day watching the English crush the Aussies at cricket, whilst ribbing the Aussie bar staff. Don’t like it when we are on top do you “cobber”? Occasional “Battle of the Bands” events when,even if you are shit, if you have the most mates in the crowd, you win.

Sportsman – A spit and sawdust throwback of real character. It doesn’t have live music as such, but worth a mention as the owners of one of the best juke boxes in the Northern Hemisphere. They even have a “Rock DJ” on a Thursday. Yes he’s got a blonde mullet and yes he’s stuck in a 1970’s time loop but where else could you hear Atomic Rooster at bone crushing volume whilst supping a pint of “Cobblers Nuts” (8% ABV)? I was there last week with Funky Paul listening to a bit of Robin Trower and got so pissed I left my house keys in there. Cath said I was more concerned about the key ring they were on, a guitar pick holder I got from Manny’s Music Shop in New York, than the keys themselves. I’d rather be burgled than lose that pick holder to be honest. Anyway the bar staff found them under a chair (funny I didn’t notice them when I collapsed on the floor) and gave them back to me a couple of days later. Result.

Delaney’s - There have been many pubs on this site. Most recently the Dulo Bar, a monstrosity kitted out like a “club” complete with DJ Decks and mood lighting. Thankfully restored to a proper music bar owned by well known Sheffield Musician and mover and shaker Steve Delaney. As you would expect has quality bands on weekends with an open mike night on a Thursday – Viktor where are you?? We are hoping to get “Slow Moves” and “Forty Four Joules” to play there sometime soon once they have dried the beer out of their amps from the Yellow Arch gig. Recommended.

The Harley - Loud, disheveled “claggy mat” of a music bar with the atmosphere of a Roadhouse, though probably too rough for Patrick Swayze. I believe this is a Hotel too but who the hell would want to stay there I haven’t a clue. It has regular live music, usually from singer-song writing types or Arctic Monkey’s wannabes. Recent acts include Willy Mason and the mighty Josh T Pearson.

West Street Live - When it first opened it seemed a laudable attempt at an American Bar in Sheffield. Looking a bit road worn now but still worth a visit. Has Live bands most nights, mostly “tribute” acts but a good range of stuff on show. Busy on weekends but tends to be empty on a weekday. My mate Dave’s band played here and me and my pal Bry were the only one’s in the crowd. Dave said it’s not often you play and know the entire crowd personally. He even waited to start a number until I’d gone to the toilet. They then blasted out an accomplished and passionate set like they were playing the Royal Albert Hall. Now that’s Rock’n’Roll.

The Harlequin – Stags resident raconteur Ron Clayton’s old “office”. This is a traditional boozer, with regular live bands, covering a range of musical bases, though rock covers are predominant. Last time I was in, a band were playing 40’s swing stuff so convincingly I thought I’d get powdered egg in me sarnie. The blackout curtains were a bit over the top though. This is also a very highly regarded real ale pub with a liver busting selection. They host regular beer festivals too. I remember the Porcos lads in there when there was a quiz on. Me and the Stags were a little worse for wear having been on the “Old Scrotum” (5% ABV) so it was with no surprise, though a little embarrassment, that the Porcos got more questions right than we did. Still, we beat ‘em at darts.

The HOP – A new venue in the “Devonshire Quarter” of the City Centre. (Why they call it that I can’t fathom, this isn’t New Orleans and the “area” in question is about the size of a 5-a side pitch. A question of planners getting up their own arses methinks to ratchet up the prices of the flats round there. They must have been from Lancashire.) Anyway this is a big pub with an excellent and large selection of real ales looking to establish itself with a range of mainly Rock and Blues Tribute Bands. Early reports are promising. Will be checking out a Bruce Springsteen tribute band there soon. They also specialize in quality pies! Break out the Henderson’s and let’s boogie.

The Pheasant – Although situated on the outskirts of town this is still a legendary Sheffield Music pub. There can’t be many music fans who haven’t sat in the back room of the “Phez” on a Friday night listening to the Frank White Band. A large roadhouse style pub, it used to attract international acts in it’s heyday but seems to have gone into a decline much like the local football teams (sorry lads couldn’t resist). I remember seeing now sadly passed Blues Legend Luther Allison in there with his full band, horn section and everything. Still one of the best gigs I’ve ever been to. Some would say it’s a bit rough but aren’t all the best pubs?? I remember the Bier Keller in Middlesbrough in the seventies, when punk started. Gangs of bikers/rockers used to wait outside for the punks and if you couldn’t recite the Rolling Stones entire back catalogue, including single releases, you got your head kicked in. It was like bloody Altamont I can tell you. Keef would have approved though.

Hillsborough Barracks Tavern - A real traditional pub with a trouser soiling selection of real ales, international lagers and soft drinks for the ladies (and Mackems). They have regular live music, with top class local performers to the fore. They also have a couple of smaller offshoot rooms including a dart board in the front side bar and a rather pleasant seated backyard area. The food is homemade and excellent so this one’s pretty much got the lot and is highly recommended. Many’s the evening I’ve been regaled by the most excellent “Johnny and the Prison Didn’t Help Boys” (possibly the only folk/rock/country/blues band to feature the erhu) over a pint of “Tinker’s Jockstrap” (12% ABV). It’s also where the Owls fans congregate before and after the match. It’s usually recommended to go for the gallon before the match then fill up after with another few more. That helps to scrub from the memory banks the 90 minutes of “action” you have witnessed. I remember Boro getting hammered there one time (thank you Benni Carboni) but by the time I left the pub I thought we’d won. Result.

The Washington – Apparently the “Wash” is owned by one of the blokes out of Pulp. Despite that it’s an excellent mix of real local and select music venue, albeit a very small one, punching well above its weight. On a weekend the walled back garden area is very popular, as is the nearby Devonshire Green. That is, a popular place to divest yourself of the 12 pints of “5 Knuckle Shuffle” (10% ABV) and hot chili kebab you’ve taken on board during the evening, before staggering into the darkness, desperately trying to hail a taxi home.

The Cremorne – One from the other (red and white) side of town. Though a small bar, they do host regular live music having opened a small performance room across the backyard. Excellent position on London Road to sample International cuisine to go with the 10 pints of “Shepherd’s Rectum” (10% ABV) you’ve just supped. If you are around there on a Saturday watch out for the occasional clearance from the Lane landing on your head. Total Football my arse. They still carry the ball off on a stretcher at half time.

The Shakespeare – A long established Sheffield pub which has risen, Phoenix like, from closure to become a real ale hot spot. They are also committed to live music, carrying on the tradition of it’s previous incarnation. Has already boasted some classic gigs inc Justin Townes Earle, Steve’s son, who amongst the doobie smoke (man it was just like Woodstock) produced a memorable set shot through with Hank Williams inspired country heartache. Yea, and indeed, Haw.

Fat Cat - Spiritual Home of the Anglo Galician Cup and Real Ale Mecca, though it doesn’t do bingo. Not really a music pub (although who can forget Alfredo’s rousing rendition of that old favourite “Anglo Galician Cup nah nah nah nah nah, Anglo Galician cup nah nah nah nah nah nah”– classic) but they do occasionally have bands in the back yard so any excuse to give them a mention. There is a plaque on the wall to commemorate the AG Cup next to the one marking where Argie got his first round in. It saw the introduction of our very own “Anglo Galician Ale” (5% ABV) though the barrel didn’t last long once the beer monsters of the Porcos Bravos got going. Legend has it that some of its patrons were witness to a particularly gruesome robbery and on a dark winters night if you listen closely on the breath of wind you can hear soft voices whispering “4-2 to the Stags – we was robbed”. Not to be confused with the Gato Gordo, Pontevedra, owned by AG Cup legend and Tora,Tora,Tora frontman Sergio. I knew he liked a drink but buying a whole pub was a bit extreme. Can you get barred from your own boozer???


Those we have lost
The current economic climate (cold, with a definite chance of heavy rain (or Cleggy as we say in Sheffield)) has seen the closure of a number of pubs in the city including some excellent music venues. Just about everyone who has ever played music cut their teeth in the upstairs room at the Grapes. The music room was closed down when the owner of the nearby Dog & Partridge moved across and took the entire contents of that particular Irish Bar with them. It’s now shows Horse Racing from the Curragh and the walls are covered with pictures of the Kennedys, in my opinion the biggest bunch of crooks and liars since the Borgia’s. Still they were “Oirish” I suppose. Most serious was the closing of the Boardwalk (previously known as the Black Swan or Mucky Duck) in mysterious circumstances which to this day have still not been fully explained.



Everyone from the Clash to Ryan Adams to Robert Plant played there at one time or another and it’s passing leaves a massive hole in Sheffield’s music scene. Honorable mention to The Halcyon Bar who, after a gig by The Tipsy Kings on Colin’s 50th birthday, closed the following day, got a total re-fit, changed its name and re-opened as a restaurant with no live music. For Those About To Rock, We Salute You.

Boroman aka Neil Old

453 comentarios:

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  1. Russian Paja dixo...
  2. se mantiene fiel a su ciudad natal, Sheffield. “Las giras te permiten ver un montón de lugares chulos pero en los que no necesariamente quieres vivir, así que cuando llegas a casa es muy fácil dejarte llevar por las costumbres y los paisajes de siempre. Además, aún hay muchas cosas de las que escribir en nuestro entorno”.
    Paja mental.

    ¿Es Tora al cubo la mejor banda indie de Sheffield?
    -Matt Helders mira a Neil Old y, asiente: Son los putos amos de la ciudad del acero.Los he escuchado en los 20 pubs de la guía y quizá,solo quizá,the wuggas (proyecto hardpunkdeath de Querido Extraño Macabros)se les acerca.

  3. Una cerveza bien fría y un cartucho de pescao dixo...
  4. No se pierdan la página del enlace.
    Con puente para las demás y todo en mi pionta-post-greguería.
    Moscas en los bares cerveza caliente
    Unicamente en favor de la locura y para no caer en rutinas de asedio apático...



    The Beer Engine was situated at 17 Cemetery Road. This pub was previously known as The Royal Oak and is now used as Delaney's Music Bar, after being known as Dulo's for a while.

    encerrado en la greguería
    de la muerte borracha,
    mi razón gira por si acaso
    bebo más....


    Delaney’s - There have been many pubs on this site. Most recently the Dulo Bar, a monstrosity kitted out like a “club” complete with DJ Decks and mood lighting. Thankfully restored to a proper music bar owned by well known Sheffield Musician and mover and shaker Steve Delaney. As you would expect has quality bands on weekends with an open mike night on a Thursday – Viktor where are you?? We are hoping to get “Slow Moves” and “Forty Four Joules” to play there sometime soon once they have dried the beer out of their amps from the Yellow Arch gig. Recommended.

  5. PUNitivo dixo...
  6. Pun: “Dos
    cadenas de pensamiento diferentes ligadas por un nudo acústico


    El bebedor desesperado pide al camarero una copa de "Delirium tremens".
    La espuma es la alegría de la cerveza.
    Lo más bonito cuando pides una cerveza es ver cómo le afeitan el copete en el mostrador.


    El pub Google merece un castigo punitivo.

  7. El Trapecista Tracio dixo...
  8. Kants y Nietzsches y Schopenhauers
    ebrios de cerveza y azur
    iban, gracias al calembour,
    a tomar su chop en Sheffield's.

    La antanaclasis es figura retórica que consiste en repetir palabras buscando efectos tanto estéticos como semánticos. Para este segundo fin se sirve de términos
    polisémicos, es decir, de palabras con significados diferentes. Un maestro en este palo
    era Boroman :-He reñido a un tabernero.
    -¿Por qué?, ¿dónde?, ¿cuándo?, ¿cómo?
    -Porque donde, cuando como,
    sirven mal, me desespero.



    El calambur es un juego del lenguaje que se produce cuando las sílabas
    de una o varias palabras contiguas son agrupadas de una forma distinta a la
    usual, hecho que produce o sugiere un sentido distinto, a menudo cómico. El
    fundamento del calambur es la segmentación del discurso. El lenguaje
    humano se caracteriza por su linealidad y esta linealidad tiene sus servidumbres.
    Cuando el mensaje o la intención de comunicar determinada
    noción o nociones están en la mente del hablante, una ideación global ha de organizarse en elementos y emitirse en secuencias. La ideación global puede estar perfectamente clara en sus contenidos para el emisor pero la traducción a un mensaje lineal sonoro conlleva inevitablemente posibilidades de diferentes
    reconstrucciones en la mente del receptor.

  9. Lacan Con Grelos dixo...
  10. DE Espejos de pub y Búhos de football.
    "Las desventuras cerveceras de Till Eulenspiegel"

    Los que saben de estas cosas dicen
    que en la literatura alemana de la Edad Media, muchos libros llevaban al final un
    addendum didáctico que se denominaba spiegel (espejo); y también dicen que la novela
    Till Eulenspiegel, nombre de su protagonista, es una colección de relatos jocosos, muy
    propia de un interés tardo-medieval por los géneros literarios menores. En anteriores
    ediciones el título había sido traducido sin mayores complicaciones, como El espejo y el
    búho.Pero desde el mismísimo título comienza el juego, porque Eule, (plr. n - búho), se interpreta como la transcripción en bajo alemán del neerlandés wl (ul, tonto, necio), con lo que el
    nombre significaría en realidad Espejo de necios.
    ¡Chúpate ésa tractor!

  11. Perkele Maljanne dixo...
  12. Sheffield es la ciudad de Four Lions ,olvida Full Monty y Full English Breakfast.
    Comedia negra que parece narrada por Boroman y que compite con The Anglogalician Cup a la hora de arrancar sonrisas crueles al lector/vidente.
    Si la banda sonora fuese de los grupos del Yellow Arch Monte Megido ,la historia sería redonda cual barriga de porco bravo.
    Amén.

  13. La escopeta nacional dixo...
  14. Discussing Sheffield as an overtly ‘cinematic’ city could easily be mocked as daft, but this town really does feel like it’s brought to you in VistaVision. Close to the total population of Sheffield lives on a hill of some kind, and almost everyone can look out of their window, if not down their street, and see at least part of the city unfolding before them. Having the urban heart on your doorstep and the countryside beyond the end of your garden was a quality Victorian art critic John Ruskin rated in Sheffield, and while the post-war period poured a lot of concrete into the city, you’re still never too far from at least a small patch of green.
    The place of the city in film starts with its own filmmakers, The Sheffield Photo Company, who got in early on the action with their rather brilliant Daring Daylight Burglary of 1903. Shot in Banner Cross, and up/down/round/about the Whiteley Woods area, one view of smoggy Sheffield down Carter Knowle Road is an eerie backdrop to the lingering death of a policeman. Early silent films aren’t all just knock-about slapstick, straight actuality, or trick films, and regional filmmakers knew both the impact and the draw of shooting in recognisable locations

  15. La escopeta nacional II dixo...
  16. A repeated panorama of smoggy Sheffield is at the heart of the propaganda film New Towns for Old from 1942, which can be found on the rather brilliant Yorkshire Film Archive Online. Scripted by Dylan Thomas, Sheffield assumes the role of the fictional Northern city ‘Smokedale’ in a bold treatise on the importance of separating housing from industry, and envisioning a city in the sky, away from the ‘muck and the grime’. The jewel in this massive restructuring would of course be the much feted Park Hill flats, and the allusion towards it in New Towns for Old is proof if any where needed of the optimism of the Sheffield Corporation going into the project.

    The fate of the Park Hill estate is as tortured and convoluted as could possibly be conceived, and has busy bodies bickering on all sides of the divide. It has yet to feature prominently in any films to my knowledge, but is none the less regularly exploited by TV and documentary teams looking for a handy visual shorthand for anything broadly Grim, Northern, Deprived, or all of the above. The BBC documentary English Heritage – Romancing the Stone did a fine job charting the highs and lows facing the current redevelopment, and the absurd ins and outs of the politics of the funding surrounding the project. The team behind the documentary also had a whale of a time shooting the estate from every conceivable angle, often catching it in rather a stunning light. A case for the site’s listing if you ask me, but lord knows the jury’s still out on that one.

    A trope which films of the city consistently return to is using an allotment or suburban park as a setting, always unfolding to the backdrop of either the distant city, if not the cities rural fringes. Post-apocalyptic classic Threads had more than a few scenes set in allotments, where anxieties about the escalating diplomatic tensions were punctuated by the roar of passing Harrier jets. Half of The Full Monty seems to be Robert Carlyle sitting on a park bench looking out over the city, brooding with son/colleague/self over the particularly vexing question of whether to strip or not to strip. Last year even served up an admirable short film called Boy, by local lad Joe Morris, where a tortured soul brushes with the mere notion paedophilia after a chance meeting in a Sheffield allotment.

  17. La Escopeta Nacional III dixo...
  18. Four Lions continues with this same trope, with the tale of four would-be jihadists bumbling together a plot to bring justice to the Western world. The apartment headquarters for this tiny insurgent cell is set in a very real terrace flat in the Sheffield suburb Tinsley, a stones throw from the hulking Meadowhall shopping centre, a fine symbol for excessive Western consumerism were ever one needed. Again the warren of allotments, and the meeting of urban and rural found there acts as a strange, almost liminal space where the group’s inept technician Fessal can field-test the explosives he’s distilled. The key scene for these tests are shot on the fields not far from Bole Hill in Crookes, and these views out into what becomes the Peak District are the very same that Ruskin epitomised in his reflections on living in Sheffield.

    There are no major plot spoilers in saying that the film is partly set in London as well, but the irony for the Sheffield audience is spotting that nigh all the filming was still done in Sheffield. The empty side streets of The Moor stand in for London’s back streets, and one particularly heated confrontation takes place in Kebabish on the Wicker in central Sheffield.
    one final irony: When John Harris dragged a camera crew to Sheffield to film the blinkered and condescending documentary Time Shift: The North-South Divide for BBC4, the team needed shots to illustrate just how dilapidated Sheffield was relative to the bounteous South. Poor John couldn’t be bothered to actually explore Sheffield, so he took a cameraman and went for a drive in his Mini Cooper. A glimpse of Park Hill ticked the usual box, and the one way system seemed to get him back to the Wicker. Flickering, shuttered shops blaze by, John squeezes in a snide remark about the Malcolm X Islamic bookshop on Spital Hill, and then rolls back down to the Wicker. A very short tour of course, but John still manages to chime in with the remark that this is all ‘very Sheffield now’. So Sheffield that it’s the first place filmmakers turn to when they want to film Sheffield to stand in for London.

  19. Mike Barja baja a la mina con una camiseta de la Thatcher dixo...
  20. Ahora que os porcos se tiran a las escopetas, otra cosa no pueden,y viven de las memorias del "Fart&The Cab", mientras esperan sicalípticos que el tractor del tiempo les redima de sus abundantes lorzas,echo de menos que el mero hecho de haber palmado todas y cada una de las visitas a Sheffield no se relacione más con la condición de esta ciudad de meca músico-cervecera.
    ¿Me entienden?
    ¿Sí?..Pues ya me llevan ventaja.

  21. sombrereras, cilindros y un surtido de tirabuzones de Sheffield ... dixo...
  22. puede ser que Sheffield se esté convirtiendo en una ciudad difícil.

    Las apuestas de Sheffield

    La lista de penas ejemplares nos lleva a 1964. En aquella temporada David Layne, Peter Swam y Tony Kay, jugadores del Sheffield Wednesday, fueron castigados de por vida por apostar en contra de su equipo y embolsarse 100 libras cada uno de ellos por ello. Posteriormente, tras siete años, los tres futbolistas volvieron a jugar aunque su carrera quedó marcada para siempre.

    Owl or Blade ?

  23. Chesterton Blake dixo...
  24. Apólogo.
    He pensado muchas veces escribir una entrada sobre un yachtsman inglés que navegando a Tractorville,por un error de cácula volviera a Inglaterra y creyerá que es una isla nueva.Y allí admirase a Inglaterra por su poderío pero no por ser inglesa.

    Banda sonora de the wuggas.

  25. El Sármata Borracho que fue Samurái Vagabundo dixo...
  26. Boroman es un poeta inglés famoso por sus intensas imágenes que evocaban el paisaje ingles y el salvaje mundo animal. Sus poemas son emblemas de la naturaleza y mitologías litúrgicas con un fuerte sentido de comunión, casi de sujetos totémicos. En verdad, Boroman hace un uso de la fábula y los animales como totems para hablar de aquellos temas que le preocupan como la música,la cerveza o el football-rugby.

  27. El Jabato dixo...
  28. [El nombre castellano de este animal deriva del árabe antiguo “gabali” vocablo que a su vez es una contracción idiomática del término “yinzir yabaliy” que significa cerdo de la montaña. La palabra jabalí aparece por primera vez en 1326 en el “Libro del Caballero” de Don Juan Manuel.
    El jabalí era estimado como imagen de valor y ferocidad extremas en el combate.

    Con tal fin era exhibido en este estandarte para atemorizar a los enemigos. Esta imagen era suficientemente clara para las tribus celtas, galas, y germanas, que sabían tanto de su poder destructivo, como del sabor exquisito de sus carnes.

    Jabalíes domesticados tirando carrozas alegóricas formaron parte de los desfiles triunfales de los generales mas famosos a su entrada en Roma.

    El jabalí salvaje estaba extendido a lo largo del Mundo Antiguo. Su ferocidad, destructividad, y fuerza lo convirtieron en el antagonista digno para el cazador y los héroes de la mitología griega. El miedo a estas bestias salvajes producía leyendas que se levantaban para tratar de explicar su comportamiento o forma de ser. Los jabalíes eran a menudo asociados con ciertos dioses y eran considerados mensajeros enviados por ellos para castigar a la raza humana.
    Si revisamos los recuerdos de nuestra niñez, todos sin dudas lo relacionarán con la genial historieta de Uderzo y Goscinny, donde acompañan a Obelix y Asterix prácticamente en todos los capítulos, pero muchos menos son sin dudas los que recuerdan que en la Bella Durmiente, el príncipe encuentra el castillo donde se halla, al perseguir a un jabalí herido que se interna en la maleza.



    Que en Blanca Nieves, el guardabosques reemplaza el corazón que debe mostrar a la madrastra, por uno de jabalí, para certificar la muerte de la niña.Y finalmente, el Sastrecillo Valiente debe matar un jabalí gigantesco, para que el reticente rey le conceda finalmente la mano de su hija.

    Todas estas historias no hacen mas que repetir en un marco distinto, las provenientes de la mitología grecorromana en la cual el jabalí acompaña a los dioses, ora como fiel mandatario de ellos, como en el caso de Diana, y otras ocasionándoles trastornos diversos. En razón de su valor, fuerza y ferocidad, es el adversario digno para hombres y dioses, y así es que Hércules, Teseo, Odiseo y Adonis se enfrentan en su momento con él, en algunos casos perdiendo la vida como Adonis, o sufriendo graves heridas como Odiseo. ]

    Tienen ustedes que perdonarme,pero nunca estuve en Sheffield y quería escribir algo en esta entrada,que tampoco he leido porque mi inglés es el del nivel español,presidentes incluidos.

  29. Misfits en un Saco de Patatas dixo...
  30. Búho: gato emplumado.
    El gato es una gárgola que se pasea por casa.
    El jabalí es el cerdo que defiende sus jamones.
    El ciervo es un animal, al que de verdad no le importa el que dirán.
    Un tren de mercancías que pasa frente al Sheffield Tap es el etc. etc. etc. etc. etc. en movimiento

  31. Vate con un Bate dixo...
  32. En el país en donde el viento cambia de nombre cada cien millas.
    En el país en donde nacen las grandes crecientes y naufragan los veletas y los iago pasas.
    En el país donde los ríos cambian de nombre cada cien meandros .
    Donde las plantas verdes de la risa son devoradas por lianas.
    En la cuenca del Don y del Sheaf,
    Poblada de gatos monteses,stags caimanes, jabalíes, basiliscos,
    Multicolores moscardones, grandes pájaros asesinos,
    Y pregúntenle a Thomo, explorador inglés, si es que retorna
    de la isla que navega en el Fat Cat de Sheffield ,
    rumbo a una borrachera inexorable, hacia el Océano de todos los "debería haber hecho eso con el balón",.
    Hacia el inconmensurable cementerio
    De aventureros, de goles y de tractores.

  33. Thomo dixo...
  34. Dear Bard With A Bat

    Your question appears as muddled as your verse, clearly penned with indulgent licentia poetica.

    I, along with fellow Stags, do land upon the island of the Fat Cat yet we do not sit and discuss what we should have done with the ball, we discuss what we did with the ball and that my dear bard, is hit the back of the net with it more times than the Porcos.

    The large murderous birds that you write about are a mystery to all those living in area of the Don and the Sheaf but maybe you should discuss what you “see” with one of Sheffield’s sons, John Krebs, and he will no doubt appease your tortured mind. Admittedly we do come across some rather “rough birds” in Sheffield (but by no means are all our lasses rough) and you would do no worse than to discuss all “birds” matters with another Sheffield son, Peter Stringfellow, as he is rather knowledgeable about these creatures.

    I expect your poetic effort to be rather more entertaining with the input of Messrs Krebs and Stringfellow.

  35. haciendo cábalas con los gallos de otro dixo...
  36. Sé fiel a Sheffield,a sus pintas y a sus tractores.
    Tres huérfanas esquivas y una pota a la puerta del Red Deer me avalan como letrista de culto en Sheffield.
    -Me cago en Hawley-.
    No nos cansamos de Boroman más existe la promesa de que el Gato Gordo maulla está semana.
    Cambio a un bardo por otro.
    Lo puse en e-Bay.
    Neil Old deja el escenario y entran los que tienen un cubo de Toras y cantan en hebreo.
    No más bromas macabras.
    ¿Habrá un pub Google open 24 horas en Pontevedra?
    Sin ser ojete,mi güey...

    Show must go on....

  37. 88 Kill Bill dixo...
  38. Desde Sheffield con amor.
    Sheffield es conocida por su espectacular vida nocturna, por lo que los porcos bravos no pueden dejar de divertirse.
    si usted prefiere disfrutar de un tractor en uno de los bares de la ciudad cóctel de élite, o una pinta de cerveza rápida en uno de sus bares rústicos, encontrará algo para que todos disfruten en esta ciudad de minas y agujeros.

    Además de estos pozos de agua, Sheffield también cuenta con algunos grandes clubes y lugares de música en vivo. Estos incluyen el Leadmill,The Harley,The Davison, y la Casa Roja.

  39. Cosaco Dipsómano dixo...
  40. In the streets of Pontevedra my mind it took a flip (chorale)

    I thought of beer and music too and it was quite a trip

    But I couldn’t park my tractor and the sun it burnt my back

    So I settled on the “Fat Cat” to plant the Union Jack


    I asked for a pint of Carling, a goodly kind of beer

    But the guvn’or, name of Sergio said we don’t serve that crap in here

    It has to be the real ale, the loving blend of hops and grain

    And after 15 pints of it a funny thought engulfed my brain


    An Anglogalician brotherhood, of piss artists and sporting sons

    Of writers and philosophers, of Boars and Stags and battle done

    And then my head began to clear, I realised with trepidation

    It was in fact reality; we had reached the ninth edition


    And so my mind remembered as the fog began to clear

    The handballs and the great fee kicks, the untold lakes of beer

    The friendships made, the songs we’ve sung, the glass always full up

    And best of all, one fact remains, the Stags still hold the cup

  41. Oliver Cromwell, the regicide and the sons of Zeruiah dixo...
  42. Cree que Pontefract y Sheffield, en Yorkshire, podrían reclamarlo igualmente. Se pone el foco sobre Locksley, que bien podría ser Loxley, un suburbio de Sheffield.
    SHEFFIELD IN THE MIDDLE AGES

    Sheffield gets its name from the River Sheaf and the old English word feld, which meant open land without trees. The River Sheaf, in turn is believed to get its name from the old word sceaf meaning boundary. So it was the boundary river.

    The town of Sheffield was founded in the early 12th century by the Lord of the manor, William de Lovetot. He built a castle on the site of Castle Market. It was on an easily defended site as it had a river on the north and east. The castle had a moat on the south and west. In 1266 rebels burned Sheffield castle but it was rebuilt in 1270. The Lord also built a church on the site of Sheffield cathedral.

    A little town grew up between the castle and the church. That often happened in the Middle Ages. The garrison of the castle provided a market for the townspeople's goods. Sheffield only had a population of a few hundred. It would seem tiny to us but settlements were very small in those days. A typical village had only 100 or 150 inhabitants.

    Medieval Sheffield would seem more like a village than a town to us. Many of the people in the town were at least part-time farmers. They tilled the fields around the town.

    Wool was made in Sheffield in the Middle Ages. After it was woven the wool was fulled. That means it was pounded in a mixture of clay and water to clean and thicken it. Wooden hammers worked by watermills pounded the wool. Afterwards it was dyed. The first cutler in Sheffield was mentioned at the end of the 13th century.

    In 1297 Sheffield was given a charter (a document granting the townspeople certain rights). Sheffield was given the right to have a weekly market and an annual fair. In the Middle Ages fairs were like markets but they were held only once a year. People would come from all over South Yorkshire to attend a Sheffield fair.

    By the 14th century Sheffield was beginning to be known for cutlery. In 1340 the king made an inventory of his possessions in the tower of London. These included a knife from Sheffield. About 1380 Chaucer mentioned a Sheffield 'thwitel' (general purpose knife) in his Canterbury Tales.

    However there were several other towns noted for cutlery. Sheffield was by no means the most important. Furthermore some of the cutlers in Sheffield may have been part time farmers. In a small market town like Sheffield there were many other trades apart from cutler such as butcher, baker, brewer, carpenter, blacksmith and shoemaker.

    Robin Hood era de Sheffield y según algunas fuentes,del Sheffield United.

  43. Only our rivers run free dixo...
  44. Carbone,carbone.
    FOOTBALL: BENITO IS BORO'S MAN FOR FUTURE.
    Boroman is the man.

    ¿Buscando un antídoto contra The Rodillo?

    The KAP es made in Sheffield.
    La pregunta es ¿Se jugará en Wembley la X Edición?
    Habrá una guía de pubs de Tokio para la XX?
    En serio. ¿Por qué no en Bramall Lane ?
    Side: Sheffield United F.C.

    Nickname: The Blades

    Ground: Bramall Lane – worldwide, it’s the oldest venue still hosting professional footie

    From Tractorville: a little further than Fogar do Breogán at 888 miles – United dominate the southern quadrants of the the city

    Kit: very continental…looks Spanish, which isn’t entirely negative…

    Made In Sheffield: the club has blazed a far-reaching extension of The Blades brand, investing in clubs from China (Chengdu Blades), Hungary ( Ferencvaros), Australia (Central Coast Mariners), and Belgium (White Star Woluwe)…who needs Jarvis as an ambassador?

    The Greasy Chip Butty Song: You fill up my senses/Like a gallon of Magnet/Like a packet of Woodbines/Like a good pinch of snuff/Like a night out in Sheffield/Like a greasy chip butty/Like Sheffield United/Come fill me again…./Na Na Na Naa Naa Naaaaa, ooo!

  45. dos veces publicano este 14 de abril dixo...
  46. SHEFFIELD IN THE 16TH CENTURY AND 17TH CENTURY

    Bishop's House was built at the end of the 15th century or beginning of the 16th century. It got its name because it is supposed to have been the house where two brothers, John and Geoffrey Blythe lived. Both brothers became bishops. In the 16th century Sheffield became far more famous for its cutlery. Before 1500 watermills were adapted to grinding tools and the cutlery trade boomed. By 1600 Sheffield was the main town in England (apart from London) for cutlery.

    Nevertheless there were several other trades in Sheffield apart from cutler e.g. there were weavers of wool and horners (men who made things like spoons from cow horn). In 1617 a survey showed Sheffield had a population of 2,207. By the standards of the time it was a respectably sized town though it was by no means large.

    Despite the booming cutlery trade there was a great deal of poverty in Sheffield. The survey showed 725 people, about a third of the population were 'not able to live without the charity of their neighbours. They are all begging poor'. There were also many people living just above the poverty line. The survey found 160 householders who 'though they beg not are not able to abide one fortnight's sickness but they would be thereby driven to beggary'. In 1628 a workhouse where the destitute could live and be put to work was built in Sheffield.

    In 1624 the Company of Cutlers was formed with power to mark artefacts if they reached a certain quality. In 1638 the first Cutlers House was built. In 1603 Thomas Crowland left money in his will to build a grammar school.

    In 1642 came civil war between king and parliament. In October that year parliamentary soldiers occupied the castle but they abandoned it when a royalist army approached. The royalists took Sheffield castle and the town without a fight. However in August 1644 the parliamentarians counterattacked. The royalists made no attempt to defend the town but they tried to hold Sheffield castle. However it was forced to surrender after a short siege. In 1648 Sheffield Castle was destroyed to prevent it ever falling into royalist hands again.

    By the late 17th century the population of Sheffield had probably risen to about 5,000. There was increasing specialisation of trade. As well as cutlers there were file smiths, scythe smiths, sickle smiths, woolshears smiths and awl-blade smiths.

    SHEFFIELD IN THE 18TH CENTURY

    In 1707 a boys charity school was founded. Earl Gilbert's 'hospital' (almshouses) was built in 1721. In 1762 assembly rooms were built were card games and balls could be held. The first theatre in Sheffield was built in 1763.

    Sheffield grew rapidly. A survey in 1763 showed it had a population of over 10,000. By the standards of the time Sheffield was a large town. In 1768 it was described as 'very large and populous but exceedingly dirty and ill paved'. Sheffield had a reputation as a grimy industrial town.

    In the 18th century Sheffield's industries boomed. Sheffield was noted for its iron industry. In the early 1740s a man named Benjamin Huntsman invented a way of making better quality steel called crucible steel. Another inventor named Thomas Bolsover discovered a way of plating copper with silver. This silver plate was, of course, cheaper than silver and was very popular for things like candlesticks and teapots. In 1773 Sheffield was given its own silver assay office. In the 1750s a lead mill was built in Sheffield and about 1760 a silk mill was built. (It was later converted to a cotton mill).

    Communications improved in the 18th century. By 1751 the River Don was made navigable all the way to Sheffield. Furthermore an infirmary was built in Sheffield in 1797.

  47. William Cobbett. dixo...
  48. The ragged hills all round about this town, are bespangled with groups of houses inhabited by the working cutlers. They have not suffered like the working weavers; for, to make knives, there must be the hand of man. Therefore, machinery cannot come to destroy the wages of the labourer. The home demand, has been very much diminished; but still the depression has here, not been what it has been, and what it is, where the machinery can be brought into play.

    Upon my arriving here on Wednesday night, the 27th instant, I by no means intended to lecture, until I should have a little recovered from my cold; but to my great mortification, I found that the lecture had been advertised, and that great numbers of persons had actually assembled. To send them out again, and give back the money, was a thing not to be attempted. I, therefore, went to the Music Hall, the place which had been taken for the purpose, gave them a specimen of the state of my voice, asked them whether I should proceed, and they answering in the affirmative, on I went. I then rested until yesterday, and shall conclude my labours here tomorrow, and then proceed to "fair Nottingham," as we used to sing when I was a boy, in celebrating the glorious exploits of "Robin Hood and Little John." By the by, as we went from Huddersfield to Dewsbury, we passed by a hill which is celebrated as being the burial-place of the famed Robin Hood, of whom the people in this country talk to this day.

  49. Daniel Defoe dixo...
  50. Sheffield
    (from A Tour Through the Whole Island of Great Britain by Daniel Defoe - 1724)

    This town of Sheffield is very populous and large, the streets narrow, and the houses dark and black, occasioned by the continued smoke of the forges, which are always at work: Here they make all sorts of cutlery-ware, but especially that of edged-tools, knives, razors, axes, &c. and nails; and here the only mill of the sort, which was in use in England for some time was set up, for turning their grindstones, though now grown more common.

    Here is a very spacious church, with a very handsome and high spire; and the town is said to have at least as many, if not more people in it than the city of York. Whether they have been exactly numbered one against the other, I cannot tell. The manufacture of hard ware, which has been so antient in this town, is not only continued, but much encreased; insomuch that they told us there, the hands employed in it were a prodigious many more than ever dwelt, as well in the town, as in the bounds of that they call Hallamshire; and they talked of 30000 men employed in the whole; but I leave it upon the credit of report....

  51. Capitán Rojo dixo...
  52. c. 1120 The Lord of the Manor builds a castle at Sheffield. Afterwards a little town grows up in the shadow of the castle.

    1266 Sheffield Castle is burned

    1270 The castle is rebuilt

    c. 1300 Cutlers are working in Sheffield

    c. 1380 Chaucer mentions a Sheffield knife. The little town is already gaining a reputation for its cutlery.

    1600 Sheffield is the main town outside London for cutlery

    1603 Thomas Crowland leaves money is his will to found a grammar school

    1617 A survey shows Sheffield has a population of 2,207

    1624 A Company of Cutlers is founded

    1628 A workhouse is built to house the destitute

    1642 During the Civil War Royalists occupy Sheffield

    1644 Parliamentary troops capture Sheffield

    1648 Sheffield Castle is destroyed

    1690 The population of Sheffield is about 5,000

    1707 A boys charity school is founded

    1721 Earl Gilbert's Hospital is founded

    1756 The road from Sheffield to Derby is turnpiked

    1758 The road to Leeds is turnpiked

    1762 Assembly Rooms are built

    1763 The first theatre in Sheffield is built. By now Sheffield has a population of over 10,000.

    1773 Sheffield is given its own silver assay office

    1801 Sheffield has a population of over 31,000

    1818 Improvement Commissioners are formed to pave and clean the streets. The streets of Sheffield are lit by gas.

    1832 Cholera kills 402 people. A dispensary opens where the poor can obtain free medicines.

    1836 The first cemetery is formed. The Botanical Gardens open.

    1843 Sheffield is given a charter

    1851 Sheffield has a population of over 135,000

    1856 Sheffield gains a public library

    1864 Sheffield bans the building of back-to-backs (houses literally joined back to back). A dam bursts and the flood kills 240 people.

    1873 Horse drawn trams run in the streets

    1875 Ruskin Gallery is founded

    1887 Mappin Art Gallery opens

    1897 Sheffield Town Hall is built

    1899 The first electric trams run

  53. 8th Maravilla dixo...
  54. 1900 The population of Sheffield is over 400,000

    1905 Sheffield university is founded

    1910 The first cinema in Sheffield opens

    1916 Sheffield is bombed by zeppelins and 28 people are killed

    1934 Graves Art Gallery opens

    World War II Bombing kills 589 people in Sheffield

    1959 Castle Market Shopping Centre is built

    1985 The Fire/Police Museum opens

    1990 Meadow Hall Shopping Centre is built

    1991 Sheffield Museum of Popular Music opens

    1994 The Sheffield Supertram begins running

    1997 Sheffield City Airport opens

    2001 Millennium Gallery opens. The population of Sheffield is 513,000.

    2003 The National Ice Centre opens. The Winter Garden opens.

    2006 Millennium Square opens.

    2007 The AngloGalician Cup was born in The Fat Cat.

  55. Andrés Siluro dixo...
  56. Añoro.
    Añoro no.
    Es cursi.
    Echo de menos una mención a los Sheffield Eagles.
    Una sola.
    Campeones del mundo en 1998.
    Con un balón por medio.
    Luego,cerveza y acero.
    No hay que trastear más,hay que trastear mejor.



    Wembley May 1998 is the greatest day in the history of the Sheffield Eagles. Having beaten Leigh, Egremont, Castleford and Salford the Eagles faced Wigan at Wembley Stadium in the final of the Rugby League Challenge Cup. Wigan were overwhelming favourites with a side containing some of the best players of the modern era, including Andy Farrell, Jason Robinson and Henry Paul. Sheffield coach John Kear devised a game plan that was executed perfectly by the team on the day. Star of the show was scrum half Mark Aston, who won the Lance Todd Trophy as man of the match. The Eagles led from start to finish, running out 17–8 winners in one of the biggest upsets in the history of the competition.

  57. ¿Dónde coño está la puta entrevista al landlord frontman? dixo...
  58. Sin hacer de esto un foro poetico (por Poe) y entrañable (porque sale de las entrañas),decirle al vecino de arriba y a nuestro universal y masivo público que el pub de referencia de los Sheffield Eagles y de sus numerosos seguidores es ...The Fat Cat.
    El de la placa y el placaje.

    Post-coito: The Wilson's Arms, en Seacroft,ese es un pub a visitar.

  59. The Beer Boy - Are You Tasting The Pith? dixo...
  60. My guide.

    I have been to the Steel City before ), but this was my first drinking-based visit - one I felt impelled to make, after hearing nothing but good from wiser and better beer aficionados than myself.

    A full programme yielded visits to 12 splendid pubs, including 7 or 8 official/unofficial brewery taps and left a warm, rippling feeling inside my heart.

    Because there were so many good beers and lovely pubs, this report is going to be a bit of 'whistle stop' (much like my day), so watch out for bullet points and try to keep up.

    1. On the Sheffield Station itself is the amazing Sheffield Tap, offering Thornbridge on cask and keg, + other top craft efforts from the likes of Tempest and Magic Rock, all complimented by hundreds of the World's best bottles. Nice leather seats too. Magnificent. I could have stayed here all day.

    2. A short trip by tram, to the destination furthest from the centre: The Hillsborough Hotel. Or..... rather the about to be renamed 'The Hillsborough'. A lovely raised beer garden afforded a lovely view of the local ski slope (!) and I enjoyed sampling 2 beers from their house brewery Crown. Or.... rather from their about to be already renamed house brewery Wood St. Top marks for the [nearly] defunct beers and for stocking November's issue of Ales and Tales (which is the local CAMRA mag for the Stourbridge/Halesowen/Dudley branch) and which (coincidentally) contains an article written by me! I did offer to sign it for them, but they politely told me to sling my hook.

    3. A walk down a hill, through an industrial estate, landed us up at the Gardener's Rest, my fave pub of the day. A tap for the Sheffield brewery - they stocked 4 of their offerings, plus other handpulled guests; but it was the decor and fabulous beer garden that won the plaudits. What a lovely clean pub, with lovely light and furniture, and what a lovely garden: full of nick-nacks, stained glass pagodas and a river view. Genuinely lovely.

    4. Tap for the Little Ale Cart brewery - The Wellington was up next. Very quiet inside, but with excellent tables and nectar-like hoppy Goldens on the bar, I did not care. Several charming rooms. Another winner

  61. Taking the beard out of beer! dixo...
  62. 5. No time to hang around, because it was 5 minutes down the road, to the multiple winner of CAMRA UK pub of the year, the bizarre Kelham Island Tavern. Nice burger scoffed, then on to...

    6. The Fat Cat, unofficial tap for the Kelham Island brewery (are you keeping up?). This was another beautifully genuine and unspoilt old boozer, nestling on a corner. Dead comfy inside, with charming features and a mix of handpulls and foreign beers.There is a plaque about your competition..Amazing ¡

    7. But we couldn't dawdle, as it was off to the Shakespeare, our last venue in the Kelham Island area*, before wending back to the wending towards, heading back to town. The Shakespeare specialised in old furniture, pump clips on the wall and a serving hatch that looked like it had been scraped from a giant bar of soap. Summer Wine Vanguard was the beautifully hoppy pale ale sampled here, thank you very much.



    8. The Harlequin - brewery tap for the Brew Company. Samples of their Blonde and Best Bitter were completed, just as a touring party arrived. Nice wooden furniture here also + good foreign beers.

  63. Beer Culture with Des de Moor dixo...
  64. 9. DAda. Which is, of course, Thornbridge's reinterpretation of a wine bar. Funky collages on the tables and funky keg beers on offer, mainly of the Thornbridge variety, but appendixed by the brilliantly hoppy Modus Hoperandi, from the Coloradan Ska Brewery. Wowee! What a greatly delicious beer to perk up the sagging central trunk of our crawl. Onwards.

    10. Bonus visit! We nosed our way inside Hop, on the way to pub number 10, and were rewarded with very loud music, lots of students and nightclub style interior. Very strange when you consider that this is an Ossett gaff, with 4 of their beers on handpull. Inspite of this, it was the lovely Hawkshead Dry Stone Stout, which tempted me.

    Number 11 was the Devonshire Cat, which offered an impressive array of well known Belgian bottles and about a dozen handpulls. Very big, very modern, very open plan, very busy, very short visit.

    12. It took an age to find the Rutland Arms, but then again I did have to divert via a comfort break, which had become all too pressing. The Rutland was more like rammed-land (by which I mean it was rather busy). I believe this is an unofficial tap for the Blue Bee brewery, but didn't realise until afterwards. This explains why I sampled an Ascot beer. Chris had a pickled egg. Bully for him.

    Then back to the Sheffield Tap and just enough time for a Sierra Nevada Ruthless Rye, before boarding train home.

  65. Ghost Drinker dixo...
  66. Final thoughts:

    The best pub crawl in the World? Yes.
    Every pub a winner? Ain't that the truth.
    My fave was the Gardener's Rest, but the Sheffield Tap was amazing, the Wellington was grrrrreat, the Fat Cat was effortlessly homely and DAda dripped with cool. They were all good.
    Lots of beer gardens. A relative rareity in Brum, but in Sheff, each pub offered a bit of inner-city greenery and the chance to sample some fresh air.
    Great scenery in this hilly city.
    Good beer was unavoidable. Every place offered lots of cask choice. And keg choice. And foreign bottles were ubiquitous. And the quality was high. And there about 1000 different breweries within a 10-mile radius. Mind blowing.
    Quite cheap too. Not to be sniffed at.
    I love Sheffield.

  67. Porco Celta dixo...
  68. No hemos cambiado tanto.
    Del Martha`s Trail,tranvía,río,risa,
    al full Boroman`s Crawl,versión extendida para quemar las dornas en la Roma inglesa.
    De colinas y arroyos ya intuimos bastante a través de la niebla sheffielder.
    Quizá cuando tomemos el último de los pubs,cantemos victoria,aparquemos un tractor y todo nos sepa a gloria,quizá ese día seremos fieles a Sheffield,de verdad.

  69. El Rey de las balas dixo...
  70. El juego más hermoso, solamente eso.
    Who knew.

    Who would have thought that there was a link between the Thompson Twins (the band that is, not the cartoon characters) and Sheffield Wednesday. The Thompson Twins link is a tenuous one actually, but the other with one of the founders of the Human League and Heaven 17 is a certain:

    Martyn Ware is Sheffield born and bred. A season ticket holder and loyal fan. On this
    Sheffield Wednesday compilation album listing from Cherry Red Records it says:

    “Martyn Ware (Heaven 17 & Human League) takes centre stage with 3 tracks (and the sleeve notes), but he is ably supported by Paul Carrack (Mike & The Mechanics) and The Thompson Twins who join the squad to sing “We Are The Owls”

    Sadly though it doesn’t give any more detail than that, so I don’t know which three tracks he was involved with.

    Once I do find that information I’ll come back to him because I am a big fan of his musical output.

    But for now we turn to the other group mentioned above there – The Thompson Twins.

    In the the quote it says that the band joined the squad to sing We Are The Owls but when you listen to the track all I can hear is rewritten lyrics done over the original instrumental.

    As with many of the songs posted here I try to find out more about them, but there’s never anything out there. It is a pity that these footballing musical moments were not better recorded. I hope with my posting of these tunes that each song will be marked and noted and that any of the people involved in these outings will eventually leave a comment to provide some insight into their origins and reasons for release.

    Getting back to this SWFC/TT “collaboration” – I don’t think the band were actually involved in this. I can’t find any written evidence anywhere that they were.

    As to the song itself – Again there’s no info out there on why they took the TT song You Take Me Up and re-record it with new lyrics. There’s nothing that tells me when it was done either.

    I don’t think it was done in the 80′s, when the team were in the old Division One.
    At that time they were bobbling along, doing nothing spectacular. They were managed back then by Howard Wilkinson who didn’t win anything with them. He started collecting trophies after he left them for dirtyLeeds.

    It could have been the early ’90′s. They had a brief resurgence and won the League Cup in 1991. (They went back to the Final in 1993 but lost to Arsenal).


    Supongo que para la próxima ,deberemos ir al Howard.

  71. Benvidos porcos e poliños. dixo...
  72. Con esta obra, a lo Boroman cool , se intenta agotar una ciudad, Sheffield, y se agota, y todo acaba, hoja estampuciada contra el suelo, en un argumento impecablemente clásico que ha cagado 450 piontas pero que debe parar. Ya.

  73. A. Arco Ballesteros dixo...
  74. Al lugar donde has sido feliz no debieras tratar de volver.

    ¿Tu objetivo real de ir a Sheffield era grabar tu maqueta?
    ¿Cómo es eso de que te dieron una paliza en Sheffield?
    ¿Cómo se llama esta maqueta?
    Se llama Sheffield 24/7. Sheffield es una ciudad muy grande cerca de Manchester que tampoco tiene mucho la ciudad, salvo un rollo musical muy muy
    muy guapo.

  75. Johnny Sheffield dixo...
  76. 5 Reasons Why Sheffield is Britain's Capital of Beer
    FIVE,O SEA CINCO.
    O'CLOCK.
    Here for the beer.
    Sheffield’s claim to be the country’s beer capital is based on the number of real ales in its pubs and the small breweries that have sprung up in the area in recent years.

    It is supported by Blond Cat, who lives in Rotherham. “Being a Yorkshireman, I’m 100% behind them, although Derby thinks it them.”

    One of the magnets for real ale drinkers is the Kelham Island area - dubbed the Valley of Beer - where pubs such as the Fat Cat, which started the barrel rolling, and the Kelham Island Tavern, which was voted national Pub of the Year twice in a row, can be found.

  77. Pint Lambert dixo...
  78. La patología de nuestros miedos individuales y colectivos y, sobre todo, de la mitología de The AngloGalician Cup.

    ¿Todo esto por una guía de pubs de Sheffield?,uffff, ¿Dónde queda Sheffield? ¿500 comentarios ahacia la costa albión?

    Tractorville y Frostburg están en Galizalbión.Los une la Orange Plank Road del Noroeste.Primero de Geografía.
    ¿Sheffield?
    "Also sprach Boroman" no es solo una fábula, sino una guía entera de ellas seguido una hermosa estela de estrambotes morales; todo un rico repertorio de exempla multiusos que lo mismo sirven para ensalzar la heroicidad, la resignación o la serenidad que para afear la prepotencia, la vanidad o la imprudencia, o recordarnos que ante un orfanato o un tractor no conviene mostrarse negligente o indeciso.Por no hablar de Mayor causas.

  79. El Trapecista Tracio dixo...
  80. Te vi el día que marchaste a Sheffield.¡La lluvia,la mugre y la música perversa de Galizalbión fueron la despedida cuando os embanastaron en el vagón del porcobravosmo heroico ¡
    ¿Qué pensarían en las tabernas del río Sheaf cuándo metiste barriga ?,¿Qué?

  81. tejón-teixugo dixo...
  82. Pena de traductor instantáneo para los ke no pillamos nada de idiomas extranjeros. Siempre es bueno conocer los garitos de un lugar por un oriundo de allí.

  83. jarvis hawley compone una balada dixo...
  84. Sheffield ambarino por la aurora besado,
    teñido de amatista y sanguino damasco,
    sobre bosques de mangos de un esmeralda tenue
    flota en una calima de malva opalescente,
    mientras trazos de loros la neblina realzan
    de grana, calcedonia y también crisoprasa.

  85. Cosaco Dipsómano dixo...
  86. "Going Back To Tractorville" by The John Deere Experience is now available in all the watering holes from Sheffield until Tractorville

  87. fm dixo...
  88. Dejo que el bardo cervecero de iniciales equívocas, exprese el agradecimiento que le tenemos todos a Boroman,el bardo de Middlesbrough: Ya me pesaba el pecado de mi ingratitud; llegas a tanto y a tan lejos que el más veloz de los deseos en llenarte de recompensas resulta lento para alcanzarte. ¡Ojalá merecieras menos y así, estaría a favor mío la proporción en que te rindo agradecimiento y premio! Únicamente he de decirte que te es debido más que cuanto se te pueda dar.

    Una guía que nos obliga a un nuevo recorrido.Esas son las que valen.

  89. Húsar Carpetovetónico dixo...
  90. C'est magnifique, mais je ne parle pas un seul mot d'Anglais

    Allez les Sangliers ¡¡¡

  91. Otro Profeta Preußisch Blau dixo...
  92. Removiendo en el incómodo tema del jinx-bogey-gafeísmo del blog,se sabe ya cuántos de los pubs estos de Sheffield que se enumeran ya han cerrado?

  93. Paolo te hace un caño dixo...
  94. Ahora que los black cats han fichado a Di Canio, dime Boroman :
    ¿ Qué entrenador pasado o actual te gustaría com entrenador del Middlesbrough ?

    No vale Barrilete

  95. Cosaco Dipsómano dixo...
  96. Great question, especially as we are in the middle of an appalling run (13 defeats in last 16 games). It depends on what ambition the club has – in our case we have thoughts of Premier League but in reality are a mid-table Championship side at best. No money, small crowds. There is also the matter of popular managers over successful one’s – not always one in the same. My thoughts on a few Boro Managers:



    Steve McLaren. Our most successful manager. We had an exciting team with Mark Viduka and Jimmy Floyd Hassleblank (as the wags named him) up front and the Boro legend Juninho in midfield. We won our first silverware, Carling Cup and played in a European Final (hammered by Seville – I got a bit of revenge when I saw Celta thrash them 2-0). He was a brilliant tactical coach, not so much a “front man” as evidenced in his catastrophic run as England manager. He’s looking for a job now so don’t be surprised if he comes back to Boro.



    Jack Charlton. He built a powerhouse of a team that dominated the old second division. The team was a mix of seasoned veterans like Bobby Murdoch and John Craggs (so hard he could tackle a Rhino), canny signings like Graham Souness and Boro born lads like David Armstrong and David Mills. We did well for a season in the 1st Division (now Premier) but Jack left and we sold all our best players and we got relegated. Despite the success I never warmed to Jack and it wasn’t just because he was a Geordie. His mantra was to not concede a goal though I have to say his team scored lots of goals too.



    Tony Mowbray. Current Boro boss and playing legend. Started well but has run into a brick wall. Doesn’t seem to be able to pick the same team two weeks running. He’s lost the fans so it’s only a matter of time before he goes. Will always be a legend on Boro though.



    Gareth Southgate. Great player, as long as he’s not taking a penalty, nice guy but totally out of his depth as a manager. Not helped by us having to sell some of our best up and coming players to Premier league but still found management a step too far. Now a TV pundit.



    Gordon Strachen. We all thought the highly regarded Strach would be our saviour. Despite his usual entertaining baiting of the press after matches he proved a disaster. He bought a load of useless Scottish players who would have struggled to get a game for the Staggs, played without wingers, and with one man up front at home. At least he left with some grace as he refused to take the extra two years of his contract. Now manager of Scotland. Good luck with that Strach.



    Bryan Robson. Playing legend. He used his superstar status to attract a host of top class players to Boro, got us promoted, into two cup finals (lost both to Chelsea – I hate Chelsea) then got us relegated and got kicked out. An honest and committed guy but absolutely no tactical appreciation. With the players at his disposal we should have been in Europe not getting relegated. There were also rumours of a massive drinking culture at the club when he was boss. He certainly liked a drink himself. A great bloke to get in a round but thick as a brick.



    As for who I would like to coach us now. In fantasy land it would be Jose Mourinho. I had the pleasure of meeting him a few times through work and he was mesmerising. A real motivator and world class tactical brain. We are hoping to get Martin O’Neil as he has just left Sunderland (ha ha ha) but we’ll probably end up sticking with Mogga and getting relegated. Our Chairman Steve Gibson is the best in the business but perhaps a little too loyal to managers who are not performing – see Gareth Southgate. Would have nice to see Brian Clough manage his home town club too.



    Whoever is in charge you have to support them. The team is in your blood. Bugger.

  97. Don Ron Mr Clayton dixo...
  98. THE PORQUO'S GUIDE TO SOME SHEFFIELD PUBS THEY WILL FIND THEMSELVES IN WHEN THEY DESCEND UPON SHEFFIELD. No 1[FOR THE BLOG].


    Fagan's
    Situated on Broad Lane[ which isn't very broad in actual fact].Used to be known as the Barrel but renamed after Joe Fagan,[not the Dickens Character or the former Liverpool Manager]long time landlord, ex Bomber Command, whose portrait forms the pub sign.Run by Thomas Patrick Boulding, the most erudite pub landlord in Sheffield with a degree from Oxford or Cambridge and an expert on Shakespeare's plays. A doppelganger in height and appearance for Basil Fawlty and a consumate reader of newspapers and gifted producer of vittles from the small back kitchen of the pub. Fagan's is a survivor from the days when this area was the usual Sheffield mix of housing and industry. Note the regimental crests of the parachute regiment and the badge of the anti terrorism squad behind the bar. Moonshine on draught,decent Guiness and Cider a cosy pair of toilets and a quirky interior with a rare surviving snug. A unique Sheffield institution, a place to be on St Patricks Day, a haunt of Richard Hawley and a music venue in the back room.

    Coming Next The Grapes/Flynn's

  99. Don Ron Mr Clayton dixo...
  100. Now the Grapes is one of that little cluster of proper pubs in this part of Sheffield. Does anyone recollect the cockerel they used to keep in the back yard? The two sheepdogs, one of which limped? Lovely tiles on the wall and and an old fashioned metal front door gate like those on the Royal Infirmary lifts. Grapes were, so I've read, hung outside taverns by the Romans by way of a sign. Did a couple of centurions pop in here for a glass of vino after a hard day in the camp on Campo Lane? These days its been turned into a cosy, well appointed pub where the customers are sat at the bar while their dogs doze on the floor. Mine hostess is the ageless Ann Flynn from the Dog and Partridge just down the block. And if you go into the left hand side room you'll see the name of the late Frank Flynn , former landlord of the D and P, set into the wall. Slainte -as they say in Cork.

  101. Jabacho Fodedor dixo...
  102. Estábamos tomando unas copas, las cuarenta o sesenta Chicas Completamente Desnudas en Directo y yo, Martinis y margaritas y una cosa y otra, cubos y cubos, había belleza por todas partes, hasta donde la vista alcanzaba y, como en torrente, la tristeza se abatió sobre mí otra vez, porque nada puede entristecer tanto, afligir el corazón, como cuarenta o sesenta excitadas, confiadas, encantadoras y ligeramente borrachas Chicas Completamente Desnudas en Directo. Así que, con pesar, me puse los zapatos y las dejé, prometiéndoles que volvería y me las follaría a todas.

  103. el Señor de las Hienas into the skull of a Dead Jester dixo...
  104. Se puso la gorra, fumó y escupió. Luego fumó un poco más. Examinan do el mundo y dotándolo de algún sentido, se tumbó y volvió a quedarse dormido. Después de un rato se levantó, se rascó el culo y echó una meada que fluyó amplia y blanca de un lado a otro. Una meada eterna. A continuación, también él se dirigió a casa. Era la última hora de la tarde. Su hiena brincó y le lamió la mano. Las palomas volvieron a levantar el vuelo en una masa compacta cuyas alas grises eran como las caras y los vértices de un cristal celeste en movimiento

  105. Rocio dixo...
  106. La verdad que me viene muy bien esto para cuando viaje. Yo lo que busco siempre son bares que tengan mobiliario hosteleria de acero inoxidable. Se que soy un poco paranoia con eso de la comida pero soy así y a mi la higiene es importante en un bar. Gracias por compartir.

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