OPINION

MALCOLM JACK

It’s easy to be cynical about the arrival of Glasgow’s huge new music arena The Hydro but there are reasons for music fans to be cheerful

I ’ve observed its construction from my kitchen window a massive, l ying-saucer-like building gradually pieced together by ant-sized workmen in hi-vis jackets, the new dominant feature on an eerily modernist Clydeside. And as a music journo, I’ve pondered what’s waiting for me there.

At The Hydro’s neighbours, Clyde Auditorium and the by-comparison now very dowdy-looking SECC, I’ve had my fair share of sublime, strange and excruciating nights over the last ten years: from properly exceptional shows by Arcade Fire and Kanye West, to getting splashed on by Kylie during her aquatic-themed Aphrodite spectacular, to feeling the glare of suspicious parents as the lone adult male stood among throngs of teenage girls at Little Mix or Katy Perry, and nearly chewing my arm off with boredom during three hours of Bryan Adams. But believe it or not, I’m cheerful about The Hydro landing and not just because it’s good for my livelihood. More than that, I think it makes a big statement about Glasgow’s important position in the music world, and promises an improved experience for gig-goers who’ve been let down by the previous alternatives for too long. The average List reader will no doubt shrug indifferently, and fair enough for every one show by a Vampire Weekend or Queens of the Stone Age, there’ll be three by a Michael Bublé, Maroon 5 or Barry Manilow. It’s corporate sponsored and, let’s face it, it looks a bit daft (dafter still: its cheese-grater car park). But I think you too should modestly welcome the Flying Saucer.

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With the live sphere more than ever where the money’s at these days, Glasgow has done well to better equip itself for a competitive future and strengthen its status as a must- visit destination. The Hydro’s 13,000 capacity plugs a big gap in the city’s live music facilities which has caused pop A-listers à la Beyoncé and Jay Z to miss Glasgow off their UK tours. Within i ve years it’s projected that it’ll become the world’s third busiest entertainment venue after London’s O2 and New York’s Madison Square Garden: some achievement for a city so small.

There’ll be myriad positive knock-ons for the local economy (potentially £130m a year’s worth), even if already over-inl ated ticket prices are set to rise (up to £125 a pop for Fleetwood Mac: ouch). But wouldn’t you rather pay a bit extra to at least see gigs in a venue optimised for purpose? Clyde Auditorium and SECC not to mention the soulless Braehead aren’t even dedicated music spaces but multi-purpose milieus considered as apt to hosting Nick Clegg’s keynote speech at the recent Lib Dem conference as they are, say, Alice Cooper attacking a girl’s steel chastity belt with an angle-grinder (another highlight from my gigs scrapbook). Boasting better sightlines and sound quality, The Hydro is not just the biggest venue in Glasgow purpose-built from the bottom up principally for live music, but the only one, period. Much as it’s never ideal to watch a band you love in such an impersonal enormo-space, The Hydro at least makes the best of modern arena reality.

Malcolm Jack is a freelance music journalist and regular contributor to The List.

‘It makes a big statement about Glasgow’s position in the music world’