Legendary Sheffield live music club that took it to The Limit
Former manager and DJ Paul Unwin remembers here...
The late Seventies and Eighties were a period of high unemployment and political turmoil in Sheffield – but in The Limit you could leave it behind.
We provided excitement, escapism and amazing music. The memories will be with thousands of punters for a lifetime – it is an amazing feeling to have been a part of that.
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Hide AdThe two directors – George Webster and Kevan Johnson – were a Jekyll and Hyde combination.
George loved the music – it had been his life up until then. Kevan was an ex-policeman and businessman with support from his wife, who helped manage the purse strings.
Relations could be toxic and it wouldn’t be uncommon for there to be a state of disagreement.
But, for all its faults, The Limit was a formidable success for much of its lifetime.
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Hide AdThere was also some other key people on the Limit payroll at the start, Ged Doherty, now head of the BPI, British Phonographic Industry, being one of them.
He was in charge of booking bands and was successful in bringing Siouxsie & the Banshees, the B-52’s and other key acts in the early days of the club.
Instead of dressing up to go clubbing, The Limit offered an alternative - dressing down. Jeans and T-shirts became acceptable, although we had to convince Kevan that trainers were an acceptable form of dress.
We were lucky enough to witness music history happening here in Sheffield with the rise of the likes of Human League, Def Leppard and others.
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Hide AdOn occasions, I had the pleasure of helping influence the industry people who were prepared to come and listen to what was happening
However, it was definitely not all my doing. The music industry was extremely buoyant during this period and record sales were at an all-time high.
This meant that behind the scenes record companies were extremely proactive when it came to promotion.
Some Sheffield DJs from the earlier days of the Buccaneer/Wapentake had moved into different jobs within the music industry but remained in contact.
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Hide AdFormer Wapentake DJ Dave Bates went on to work for Virgin Records and then Phonogram where he became head of A&R, and signed acts including Def Leppard and Tears for Fears.
Thanks to Dave, I got records well ahead of their release and would often leave Phonogram’s head office on New Bond Street, London, carrying armfuls of vinyl.
Ged also left The Limit to work for Richard Branson at the Victoria Palace in London, promoting bands, and then went on to manage Sniff & the Tears, Paul Young and Alison Moyet, before becoming head of Arista Records and Sony Music.
So when The Limit opened it became a magnet for rock ’n’ roll. The West Street crawl would usually end up at our place.
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Hide AdWas there any fun while working at the Limit? Well, the simple answer is yes.
If you were a people watcher and were sober and stood where I was during the night, you would see things that would make you smile and on occasion nearly wet yourself laughing.
For instance, the night The Cramps played for the first time, their lead singer Erick Lee Purkhiser, alias Lux Interior, caused great amusement to the audience.
He counted the band in by banging the microphone four times on the false roof above the Limit stage. On the fourth attempt he succeeded in removing the complete roof panel.
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Hide AdThe club’s owners weren’t impressed, I overheard one of the directors say ‘they'll have to pay for that’.
There were amusing moments, missed opportunities, scary times, total insanity, which after 10 years of being the best or worst DJ, according whichever director or manager you would talk to, it was time to leave. Therefore, in May 1988 I left The Limit for the last time.
Was the decision to leave a difficult one to make? Well, the simple answer was no.
*The book is available from dirtystopouts.com and Amazon for £13.95