Some Crowns mean something

Juan Mourep

Vital 1st Team Regular
http://www.birminghammail.co.uk/whats-on/music-nightlife-news/birmingham-pub-crown-hosted-black-7270428

Birmingham pub The Crown which hosted Black Sabbath, Led Zeppelin and UB40 sold to developers

Calls to turn historic pub into music heritage site fall on deaf ears after Admiral Taverns sells property for £1.2m

The chance to turn Birmingham’s last great music heritage pub into a rock and roll museum has been lost – because it is being sold to developers.

The Crown, at the corner of Station Street and Hill Street, is the pub where Black Sabbath played their first gig.

Other regulars included Status Quo and Led Zeppelin, and it was the spiritual home of UB40.

Ian Campbell – father of reggae brothers Ali and Robin Campbell – recorded the country’s first live folk album there in 1962.

But Admiral Taverns has sold the pub to a Japanese company for a rumoured £1.2 million, and licensee Colleen Andrews, who has has been told to leave by June 22, believes its history could be lost forever.

“I can’t understand why Birmingham City Council is allowing this to happen to our heritage,” she says.

“This pub is the city’s equivalent of The Cavern in Liverpool, where The Beatles started out.

“It could have become a great live music venue again, and a wonderful rock museum. Everyone from The Who to Duran Duran, Thin Lizzy and The Move have played here. On the wall are the words Jim, The Doors.

Black Sabbath guitarist Tony Iommi warns that Birmingham risks losing an important part of its heritage.

“The Crown was hugely important to the Black Sabbath story,” he says. “It was where we cut our musical teeth as a blues band.

"We’d be playing 12-bar blues along with the many other groups who played there, and starting to develop our own identity.

“We had some great times there, and made many good friends. The groups would swap ideas and sit in on each other’s sets. It was where the sound of the Brum Beat scene was honed, and the start of Black Sabbath’s career.

"The Crown is also one of the grand old buildings of Birmingham. It may have seen better days, but I would have thought it was important for the city to preserve the heritage that is all too quickly disappearing from our streets.

“It is a matter of concern, too, that music pubs are getting thin on the ground. Back in the 60s and 70s these were the places where today’s big groups started out. Where are the opportunities for new bands to get their act together?”

More at the link


Shocking! This should be a city centre attraction, the birth place of Sabbath, it should have a blue plaque and be a listed building.


 
(Bit too much quoted there mate, needs to be half :35: )

Birmingham have allowed so many lovely buildings go to wreck and ruin or to be redeveloped, very sad as a lot now demolished are so much nicer than the modern rubbish that has replaced them.
 
Such a shame. The council has certainly missed a trick there.... mind you, that's bloody typical.

I wonder what these Japs are going to do with it. Only time will tell I suppose. Another live music venue bites the dust. Is there many left now?
 
Money is certainly talking in this matter.

Bizarre though isn't it ? The council lend Warwickshire millions of pounds , then let this happen,