Camden Town Walking Tour - Pubs, Market, Venues, History (4K)

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 27. 06. 2024
  • Camden Town Walking Tour - Pubs, Market, Venues, History in 4K.
    Our walking tour of Camden Town starts on Haverstock Hill at the Sir Richard Steele pub then passes Chalk Farm Station. From here we see The Enterprise pub and the Camden Roundhouse, scene of the Congress of the Dialectics of Liberation in 1967. After a detour down Belmont Street we visit The Lock Tavern, and The Monarch/Barfly before heading into the recently refurbished Stables Market. From here we pass into Camden Lock Market and visit Black Gull bookshop where I buy a couple of Terry Pratchett books. We cross the Regent's Canal and look back to Dingwalls before heading down Camden High Street past the Electric Ballroom and the Good Mixer in Inverness Street. Over the road from Camden Station we have The World's End, formerly the Mother Redcap and the Underworld. Further along the High Street we pop in on The Camden's Head home of the brilliant Camden Comedy Club before making our way to Camden Palace, now Koko. We double back along the High Street to have a look at the Jewish Museum and then pay homage to Madness at The Dublin Castle. Our Camden Town walking tour concludes at Cecil Sharp House.
    Music
    Tupelo Train by Chris Haugen
    Outlaw's Farewell (part II) by Reed Mathis
    Nevada City by Huma-Huma
    Shot in 4K on a DJI Osmo Action with Rode Videomicro
    Support my channel on Patreon / johnrogers
    _________________________________________________________________________________
    Please subscribe for regular videos: bit.ly/1EJjIB8
    My shop: teespring.com/stores/the-lost...
    My Book: This Other London amzn.to/2zbFmTd
    Audiobook & Kindle: amzn.to/2xLGb8s
    Blog: The Lost Byway: thelostbyway.com/
    Patreon / johnrogers
    Twitter: / fugueur
    Instagram / thelostbyway
    Make a donation to help support the channel paypal.me/JohnRogersLondon - many thanks!
    My Walking kit (amazon affiliate link - I earn a small commission on purchases)
    amzn.to/2Xky2UA

Komentáře • 532

  • @glesgamail
    @glesgamail Před 3 lety +41

    I once sat behind Ivor Cutler on a bus in Camden Town. I was chatting to my partner and didn't notice him until we got up to get off and he turned and said: "You have a wonderful accent." (I'm from north Lanarkshire). I recognised him, but couldn't get his name out, but replied: "You're, you're ...". To which he replied (in that lovely Cutleresque lilt): "I am."

    • @howdymartin6258
      @howdymartin6258 Před 3 lety +3

      A genius of a man - always loved hearing him in John Peel's shows.

  • @estherdoyle8175
    @estherdoyle8175 Před 3 lety +23

    My parents came over from Ireland in the 1950s and settled in Camden Town. I was born into a house in Harmood Street. In the intervening 60+ years I have done everything from cajun dancing in Cecil Sharp House to dancing/drinking/carousing in most of those pubs in all their incarnations, and taking acid on the banks of the canal in the middle of the night. I was down there only today in the new epicentre of Camden Town, ALDIs on the High Street. One place you missed on your travels was the Rowten House on Arlington Rd. A hostel for the working (and non-working) person and often the first port of call for the incoming Irish back in the day - Camden Town for the great lie-down was the saying. Still going strong today and a refuge for those who don't have much, God bless them.

    • @ronaldm8235
      @ronaldm8235 Před 3 lety +3

      My dad moved into the big house in 1947. Came from Ireland and stayed for 50 years. I now live in Kentish Town and also was in Aldi today! It’s not bad really is it!

    • @estherdoyle8175
      @estherdoyle8175 Před 3 lety +4

      @@ronaldm8235 My aul fella had spells in the Rowten House too. If the newly landed Irish had no relatives it was either there or down to the Irish Centre in Murray Street to see if the priest could get them a home and the start. And we're spoiled for choice with the German supermarkets these days!!!

    • @tinkhefferon9934
      @tinkhefferon9934 Před 3 lety +3

      @@estherdoyle8175 my father came from Mayo started off in Liverpool then Birmingham headed to Peterborough where his brother stayed he moved on to Newport Pagnell where he then met my mother to be and had 6 boys , and set up home until his passing at a young age of 57 , I suppose I followed in his footsteps went to London and worked on the Brent Cross shopping centre met some great Irish men working there used to go to Camden, Harlesden, Cricklewood, Willesden, drinking, the Rising Sun, the Spotted Dog, Mean fiddler, just a few to mention great memories and great times

  • @paulwhite6626
    @paulwhite6626 Před 3 lety +9

    I came to Camden in 88 and although I sometimes move away, somehow I always find myself pulled back.
    The Camden Falcon that as you quite rightly pointed out, was a great gig venue, but sadly closed quite some time ago...20 odd years back. It is now flats. I was walking up Kentish Town Road 5 years ago and was astonished to see the pub sign for The Camden Falcon in the window of Oxfam so went in and bought it for £5.
    Bargain!
    And a real bit of Camden history as well it now hangs on my bedroom door.
    When I first arrived in Camden I got a job at Dingwalls simply by approaching the manager and just like Yosser Hughes said "Gisser job!" and amazingly got one, so got to see Lemmy coming in to play his favourite fruit machine.
    I REALLY miss Compendium, and the Camaervon Castle.......a part of what made Camden special died the day Compendium closed. Still Walden is a fine bookshop so I make the effort to continue being a patron, but Waterstones closed maybe a year or so ago because so many now buy their books through the behemoth that is Amazon.
    It is terrible seeing pub after pub closing down to become flats and it would be a tragedy if bookshops went the same way.
    For those in the area with a radical bent who miss Compendium, take a trip to Kings Cross and take a look at Housmans Books at the Scala end of Caledonian Road....it isn't Compendium, but we should cherrish the bookstores we still have.

  • @ruthbrierley1798
    @ruthbrierley1798 Před 3 lety +26

    I loved Camden Market in the mid-90s. Bootleg cassettes and second hand clothes. Went back a couple of years ago and it seemed to be mostly trendy street food. Thanks for this walk down memory lane!!!

    • @WheelieMacBin
      @WheelieMacBin Před 3 lety +4

      Used to be 'Goth and Alternative central'. Today it is nothing like it used to be. At least Cyberdog are still there.

    • @johnneville403
      @johnneville403 Před 2 lety +4

      @@WheelieMacBin It's now just a tourist trap, sadly. Even the resident 'punks' appear only to be there to charge for tourist photo opps.

    • @trevorbarre5616
      @trevorbarre5616 Před 2 lety +4

      Possibly the worse food I have ever eaten was bought from Camden Market. A rank 'soup' that was swimming in grease. Utterly revolting. (I am in no way a 'foodie', and will eat anything in reason. This, however, was beyond reason.)

    • @tilerman
      @tilerman Před 2 lety +1

      @@johnneville403 'Plastic punks' or 'weekend punks' i call them. Was in Camden recently and there was a 'punk' with a sign, 'help a punk get drunk' (LOL). I'm old enough to remember real London punks and this 'punk' looked like that during the week he holds down a city job. I find it all quite sad really, like i do most of London, it all just seems so plastic, fake, and empty. The real characters have gone, replaced by hipsters, who think the are really different and individual, but in fact all look and sound the same. Dull, boring and uninteresting. I remember London in the late 70's and 80's and it felt raw, and dirty. Hippies, squatters, travellers, punks, rockers, all gone. Camden market really is a pile of shit now.

    • @loganstroganoff1284
      @loganstroganoff1284 Před rokem

      @@tilerman sounds like london went the same way as NYC. new york is absolutely nothing like it used to be. The real new Yorkers are gone. Rich hipster trust fund kids took over bc normal ppl can't afford it anymore and most of the classic old locally owned joints are gone. So many storefronts empty. It's just a tourist trap and playground for the mega rich now.

  • @MrScipio72
    @MrScipio72 Před 2 lety +2

    Lived in a share house just off Camden Parkway back in '93/94. BEST time of my life - World's End was our local. Great great times.

  • @ThePoushal
    @ThePoushal Před 2 lety +5

    I take London for granted. Thanks for reminding how great a place it is!

  • @stue9391
    @stue9391 Před 3 lety +2

    This was 1 of the last things that I sat down with me mam to watch. She loved Camden, and this video too

  • @hereiskinder
    @hereiskinder Před 3 lety +5

    Lovely walk! Perhaps a more recent memory of Camden from me - myself and my friends would get the train up to Camden Town from Kingston upon Thames most weekends in the mid-2000's so we could lark about the markets buying weird novelty t-shirts and lighters. It was a completely different world to the side of London we grew up in, with all the futuristic shop fronts and street food. I have a fond memory of buying what I thought was ecstasy (while dressed in a named guantanamo bay one piece) only to get home to find I had a bag of Smints.

  • @kerryannestevenson6099
    @kerryannestevenson6099 Před 3 lety +11

    I used to love Compendium,I was heartbroken and bereft when it closed.I remember being chatted up by Desmond Dekker in Dingwalls.And before I moved to live in Camden,coming up from Stockwell with a gang to the Roundhouse to see Siouxie and the Banshees and Poly Styrene.

    • @rbrowne2998
      @rbrowne2998 Před 3 lety +1

      I think that shop sailed close to the wind. They sold "Class War" (of Ian Bone fame) and some Anarchist stuff as far as I remember. The police were always raiding them. Once the Conservatives got in I guess their days were numbered. I don't see any government putting up with them today, either.

    • @VisionsofChina
      @VisionsofChina Před 3 lety

      @@rbrowne2998 My buddy (a communist) had an "alternative bookshop" in Bridgwater Somerset when Tom King was Minister of Defence and MP for Bridgwater. He sold various stuff Palestinian pamphlets, Sinn Feins newspaper An_Phoblacht, the usual stuff and so on. It regularly got broken into and nothing was ever stolen. The clue was the big men sat in black Range Rovers parked around Bridgwater.

  • @jansammut9557
    @jansammut9557 Před 3 lety +6

    I was born in Albert Street, way back in the 50's. I have nice memories of Camden Town back then. It has changed a lot since the 50's /60's but I am still fond of it.

    • @rbrowne2998
      @rbrowne2998 Před 3 lety

      A regular tramp, a grime encrusted small man, used to sleep under the statue (for depositing orphans) of St Pancras in Parkway near the park gate. I commuted that way at the time and very early morning would see him clear out from his shelter.

  • @russellsprout2223
    @russellsprout2223 Před 3 lety +11

    Fantastic tour which I reckon could *easily* have been extended into a mini-series. Brought back so many happy memories of my misspent youth. Atb.

  • @ralphwinter6421
    @ralphwinter6421 Před 3 lety +13

    Thanks John, brought back some great memories of being totally off my head on Acid and Magic Mushrooms- Camden Palace on a Friday in the early 90's on E and Acid,.. Good Times..

    • @squirrelgirl2068
      @squirrelgirl2068 Před 3 lety +4

      Nice one Ralph!😜👍🏻🍄🍄🍄

    • @ralphwinter6421
      @ralphwinter6421 Před 3 lety +2

      @@squirrelgirl2068 Do you remember The Supernatural ? Spaced Out Baby !

    • @kevinpowell7948
      @kevinpowell7948 Před 3 lety +2

      Mental, mental..... Green laser, the twins, nuthouse Crowland rd after, Lennie McLean, calli, purple omms. 😜

    • @squirrelgirl2068
      @squirrelgirl2068 Před 3 lety

      @@ralphwinter6421 yes Ralph.. salvia sessions...Ahh those were the days! 🍄👍🏻

    • @trevorbarre5616
      @trevorbarre5616 Před 2 lety +1

      Oh Christ, give me a break. My trips and my e-breaks. Ffs, grow up.

  • @marialooksaround
    @marialooksaround Před 3 lety +5

    I‘ve only been to London twice for 5 days total and on one of the visits I managed to get to Camden Town. It was 2015 I think, O found it amazing! The Camden Lock Market convinced me I want to someday live in London for at least a couple months. It is a bit of a hipster place, for sure, but it breathes history and I can only imagine how cool it was 30 years ago. Thank you for this tour!

    • @JohnRogersWalks
      @JohnRogersWalks  Před 3 lety +3

      Glad you enjoyed it Maria - London is an amazing place to live even if just for a few months

  • @lesliegprice6652
    @lesliegprice6652 Před 3 lety +6

    Hey John Great to see you walking again , Camden, what can I say, two places, Roundhouse 69 to 72, so much music and bands, virtually every Sunday, I saw PinkFloyd there, Soft Machine, Hawkwind, also folk and poetry, it was a steam locomotive shed with a turntable in the middle, also Primrose Hill was a favourite, lots of squats and mad times in that area, also the original market and the Alternative Book shop, it was because of a book I found in there John Michell New Atlantis that started my love affair with Glastonbury, Camden High Street and also Regents Park, a great area with an amazing history, thanks John,take care mate ♥☮️☯️🌈

  • @ulricvoncatalyst1507
    @ulricvoncatalyst1507 Před 3 lety +11

    Delighted to see you're finally taking a comprehensive tour of my old London stamping grounds. Just pouring myself a beer and sitting down to enjoy this, ready to get all misty-eyed as the sun sets over old Glasgow toun.

  • @bryanmartin295
    @bryanmartin295 Před 3 lety +25

    Watching too many of these videos. My grandchildren come for lunch each day and as they leave I say”See you tomorrow for lunch…… whatever that may be!

  • @user-oq2pl6xq7c
    @user-oq2pl6xq7c Před 2 měsíci

    I only visited Camden when visiting my son in East Finchley but was captivated by the stories of the stables and the coal moving from the canal, similar to Kings Cross with the railway. He loved the music, I loved walking on the wooden boards in the market where the horses were stabled at night. You can imagine it after they had finished their work tied up, fed and watered to rest for the night. Evocative.

  • @TrevRaynsford
    @TrevRaynsford Před 3 lety +4

    I used to go to Camden Town every Sunday when I lived in London. Went round the market and had a pint or two in The Worlds End. My favourite part of London and just 35 minutes on the Tube from Tooting Broadway near where I used to live.

  • @suecondon1685
    @suecondon1685 Před 3 lety +3

    Black Gull book shop, oh joy! I went in there in 2011 and there was a book on the shelf literally calling out to me. "In Camden Town" by David Thomson. Absolutely fabulous book, part autobiography, part history of Camden. It was the best £2 I ever spent. A truly wonderful book, if you're not aware of it, please give it a go. It's what got me into psychogeography. Dublin Castle... 🥰... Has the dubious honour of having the stinkiest pub loo I've ever been in, but that was years ago... Spent many a night in all these pubs.

  • @munozmontenegro
    @munozmontenegro Před 3 lety +6

    Cada vez que viajo a West Worthing a visitar a unos amigos ingleses, paso a Londres por una semana, es un ritual para mi dar una vuelta a Camden Town. Gracias John por comentar este lugar. Desde Chile, América del Sur

  • @rooneye
    @rooneye Před 3 lety +2

    Camden is such a cool place. Vibrant and full of life. This is how all highstreets should be. There should be LIFE and hustle and bustle and action. Highstreets are DEAD in a LOT of places. Dying before COVID and COVID just absolutely decimated some that might not recover. The government need to step in and make sure highstreets thrive as everyone moves over to shopping online. We still NEED highstreets. They're culturally vital for our society.

  • @maria8399
    @maria8399 Před 2 lety +3

    Camden is always in my memory as the place where many of my Cypriot family lived and worked. My mum got a job on the high street when she came to the UK in 1962! Camden used to be more of a mix between the everyday shops and the bohemian ones - your lovely film shows how much the alternative/tourist vibe kind of took over. My dad used to go shopping on Inverness Street for fruit and veg, I used to buy records from Out on the Floor and sweets from Woolworths! There was a cool material shop called 'Ruby in the Dust' I think. Plus the delicious and hugely missed Olympic bakery. Always had a great vibe did Camden.

  • @angelajones9129
    @angelajones9129 Před rokem +2

    Hello John l was glad to hear you give Walden books some well deserved publicity it's a great shop thank you for a very interesting and nostalgic for me .video

  • @erj145jet
    @erj145jet Před 2 lety +8

    Nice stroll through Camden as a frothy tourist destination living off the glory days of the late 70's and 80's. I was born there in the 50;s and my memories are of dark dilapidated, industrial buildings surrounded by dilapidated Victorian terraces converted into rooming houses. It was deeply working class in the industrial sense of Northern steel towns. My great grandparents were rural immigrants in the mid 19th century who worked the railways and Gilbey's Gin as manual labour, living in parts of Camden now buried under council flats, but described at the time as the pit of depravity. I remember the market on Inverness Street where fresh chickens were gutted in the street to order and the fruit and veg stalls. The meths drinkers huddled in little groups, which were replaced by Tennents lager drinkers and I suppose by drug addicts more recently. The further away from the Canal the better things got, the big Co-Op and Bowmans were nods towards a normal London village. Its lovely to see people using Camden Town as a tourist spot, but a bit of a shame that its hard edged past has been forgotten.

    • @antispindr8613
      @antispindr8613 Před rokem

      Sorry to go a little off-topic, but does not this contain shades of Notting Hill - years before Notting Hill (the film)? Then again, how many people are interested in dirt poor people or race riots?

    • @erj145jet
      @erj145jet Před rokem

      @@antispindr8613 I think you have a point. I used to get taken to the Notting Hill market when it was mainly fruit & veg, which became bric a brac, then antiques. It became an immigrant area quite early and was more deprived than Camden, whereas Camden felt more working poor, although a popular destination for Irish immigrants as well. I don't think the race riots of NH have been forgotten at all, there was a successful drama on TV set around them quite recently. The plight of the Irish, though, is rarely mentioned, although it was indirectly referenced in Call the Midwife with itinerant characters working in the rebuilding of the east End in the 60's. The tragedy of modern London is that the Inner parts got gentrified and the poor just got moved out to the outskirts. Places like Enfield which were quite genteel are now like war zones!

    • @antispindr8613
      @antispindr8613 Před rokem

      But the media always been a little hostile towards the poor. For why would the press call people forced out of London "Over-spill"?

  • @smacker2182
    @smacker2182 Před 3 lety +5

    Great memories John. I worked in Somers Town in the early 80's and was a regular visitor to Camden Town and the market at weekends which was more of a flea market then with crafty type stuff and some dodgy fashion things of the time like the Ian Curtis type raincoat - more like Frank Spencer on me. I was also in a band that did a couple of gigs at Dingwalls and with stage that had a pole in the near middle of it - those who played there will remember it. Madness were everywhere. Arlington House from their song "one better day" is just off Inverness Street which was a fruit and veg market. Also about 1981 I saw a pre Eurythmics post Tourists Annie Lennox walking past the Electric Ballroom. Saw countless gigs at the Music Machine notably Iggy Pop and Slade. Such great memories all exciting for a young man in his early 20's.....now in my mid 60's.

  • @mandylovett3980
    @mandylovett3980 Před 3 lety +4

    Thanks for a lovely tour, I have fond memories of 'clubbing' at Camden Palace in the 80's as the music was more indi unlike the usual dance music played in Ritzi or Eltons in Tottenham, I remember all the bar staff had mohican hair do's , we had to get the night bus N29 home back to Enfield

  • @athoshadjiantoni6403
    @athoshadjiantoni6403 Před 3 lety +4

    The great wonder of Camden Town, so many colourful and bright places.

  • @danivloger
    @danivloger Před 3 lety +1

    I moved into London in 1990 and being an old hippy I have come to live in Camden
    I am still here !

  • @oc2phish07
    @oc2phish07 Před 2 lety

    Brought back many happy memories. I used to drink in The Elephant''s Head myself years ago, with my publisher and other writers of early computer adventure games. Great days.

  • @GreyGhost.
    @GreyGhost. Před 3 lety +2

    brilliant half hour from the master.

  • @alanpitts6326
    @alanpitts6326 Před 3 lety +6

    Great video John. My memories are some years earlier and maybe
    more Hampstead but one of my favourite venues in the late 60’s early 70’s was The Country Club, Haverstock Hill. Saw John Mayall, Pink Floyd, The Nice, The Taste, Spooky Tooth, Fairport Covention and many others. Others who played there were Hendrix, Bowie and even Roland Kirk, the blind jazz multi instrumentalist!

  • @basilwatson1
    @basilwatson1 Před 3 měsíci

    72 camden street those who know, know great times ...was barred from the worlds end and steels was a favorite!

  • @philipreddaway6410
    @philipreddaway6410 Před 3 lety +2

    Thanks John. My first job in London was in Greater London house at Mornington Cresent in 1978, and we lived in a studio flat in Albert street off Parkway ( shared bathrooms - cant believe it!!) when this part of London was mainly owned by Greek Cypriot landlords and was almost completely ungentrified- My second job was pulling pints in the Spread Eagle at the end of our street - then a mostly Irish boozer though not as hardcore as The Dublin Castle. Fond memories of the early days of the market, gigs at the Roundhouse ( Roxy music etc) , the Odeon on Parkway when it was a single gigantic screen, and bumping into Alan Bennet at the great deli Delancy stores on a Sunday morning!

  • @seant666
    @seant666 Před 3 lety +7

    The Electric Ballroom is still a gig venue. Obviously shut at the moment.

  • @stevenmccart5455
    @stevenmccart5455 Před 2 lety

    Camden Town!!! One of my favorite places in the city but ,I say that about nearly everywhere I go in the city. Definitely my favorite for shopping.

  • @dambrooks7578
    @dambrooks7578 Před 3 lety +7

    I very much appreciate you using the name of Camden Palace, I cannot abide the name of Kokos, it is another venue that I have seen loads of bands in.

    • @ronaldm8235
      @ronaldm8235 Před 3 lety +1

      I think it was called the music machine before? Well I did get beaten up by the bouncers once!

    • @dambrooks7578
      @dambrooks7578 Před 3 lety

      @@ronaldm8235 I don't recall it being Music Machine particularly, or maybe we always just called it Camden Palley or something...

    • @markbushy
      @markbushy Před 3 lety +1

      @@ronaldm8235 wow much respect! That goes back some ways!

    • @JC-om6vk
      @JC-om6vk Před 3 lety +1

      For a short time, before it was the Music Machine, it was called "Nero's" (mid 1970's).

  • @mikebarton
    @mikebarton Před 3 lety +1

    Ready? Here we go....it's all changed since my day. 😉
    In 1987 my friend said, of the market area, it was all changing and there was money to be made. Did we? Of course we didn't. *sigh*
    There's the Bucks Head where I had my 30th. It got messy.
    Nostalgia, nostalgia.
    Thank you John.

  • @warlockofwordsreturnsrb4358

    Fond memories of browsing books here and riding down the canals on a barge, on a London trip!

  • @richardjohnwhite4971
    @richardjohnwhite4971 Před 3 lety +2

    Richard White. How things have changed - as they must. I worked in Camden until I left on my travels in 1973, and apart from brief holidays I have been away ever since. But it was good that you finished up outside Cecil Sharp House. It was there that I, like many other folkies, studied guitar with a wonderful teacher, John Pearse. John is no more, but I am still playing away in my own mediocre style. I flatter myself. This is for all the guitarists who learned to play Big Bill Broonzy's 'Story of Love' from the great John Pearse.

  • @Chingfordassociates
    @Chingfordassociates Před 3 lety +3

    The photo of the band on the cover of the first album by The Clash , which was taken round the back of the Stables back in the days when it was derelict always makes me think of Camden. I suppose everyone has their own Electric Ballroom moment, for me it was seeing Teenage Fanclub.

  • @lionelmarytravels6003
    @lionelmarytravels6003 Před 3 lety +1

    What an interesting place. So much to see, with pubs, markets and all kinds of shops. Amazing to think all those big name entertainers played in those places.

  • @LondonTownWalk
    @LondonTownWalk Před 3 lety +1

    I never lived in Camden Town proper but it has been one of my main spheres of activities for more than 30 years, and I have a lot of good memories. Thank you very much.

  • @councellingthecouncillors
    @councellingthecouncillors Před 3 měsíci

    1988 1993 I was at Air TV and then Air Studios so Camden & Hampstead so this reminds of so many stories, some unrepeatable lol.

  • @troymphoto
    @troymphoto Před 3 lety +4

    Excellent walk John, brings back all the memories of my teenage years going to gigs and spending my early 20s there as well.

  • @Suho1004
    @Suho1004 Před 3 lety +1

    Not a very unique memory, but on my first day in London back in the mid 90s, still jet-lagged, some friends dragged me out to the World's End. I ordered a pint of Guinness, which to an American student who had never known anything but cheap American beer was a revelation. I ended up drinking thirteen pints. Don't know how I managed to get home again, but I did. I used to love walking around Camden Town whenever I got the chance.

  • @jaomwtoptd
    @jaomwtoptd Před 3 lety

    Best pub in the day, Saturday lunchtime, the Hawley Arms. No two chairs the same, wallpaper peeling off, extremely loud well stacked juke box, great beers and food poisoning. The best!

  • @interpoluk
    @interpoluk Před 3 lety +6

    Something else of note.The Dublin Castle was used by Irish navvies, The Windsor Castle English, Edinboro Castle Scots and Pembroke Castle for the Welsh.

    • @simonkynaston6751
      @simonkynaston6751 Před 3 lety +3

      And the Taffys in the Caernavon...sadly no longer with us

    • @Lee-ru5vi
      @Lee-ru5vi Před 3 lety +1

      I used to listen to great blues bands on a Saturday night in the cearnaven castle, that was in the day's when you could walk home a feel safe.

    • @GWJUK
      @GWJUK Před 3 lety

      John almost made to the Edinburgh Castle at one point. I was a fan of the Spread Eagle, not a bad wee pub.

    • @simonkynaston6751
      @simonkynaston6751 Před 3 lety

      @@Lee-ru5vi ..The Radical Sheiks! Great band. Alan Glen the frontman harp player is still going strong...

    • @simonkynaston6751
      @simonkynaston6751 Před 3 lety

      @@Lee-ru5vi The Radical Sheiks! Friday nights...excellent band...

  • @ianmcclavin
    @ianmcclavin Před 3 lety +1

    My late father grew up in Camden Town. He said there were market stalls on Camden High Street, with trams still running through there. He said as kids they used to take sprats off the fish stalls, put them on the tram lines, and watch the trams run over them!
    Fortunately it wasn't hereditary..!! 🤣

  • @zigowl1193
    @zigowl1193 Před 3 lety +1

    You've inspired me. Heading there tomorrow for a walk around. Thanks. 😁

  • @waynedrayton
    @waynedrayton Před 3 lety

    Great walk with memories for many different ages. For me 89/90 two very important shops for a b-boy....4 Star General and the Soul II Soul shop with the baddest sound system.

  • @jeffmason3785
    @jeffmason3785 Před rokem +1

    Great walk in a part of London we wanted to get to, but didn't. Watching this makes me put in high on the list for our next visit to the UK.
    Hope you enjoyed your voyage into the wonderful world of Sir Terry. I began with "Guards, Guards!" and worked outward from there in both directions. Everyone develops their own strategy for the Disc series.

  • @chrisrute9627
    @chrisrute9627 Před 3 lety +3

    Fantastic walk around of one of London's gems!

  • @MeTheRob
    @MeTheRob Před 3 lety +1

    I played at a Greasy Truckers gig at the Roundhouse. My rock 'n' roll claim to fame is that Brinsley Schwarz borrowed my speakers.

  • @interpoluk
    @interpoluk Před 3 lety +9

    Madonna first UK gig in Camden but the first appearance was on The Tube from The Hacienda Manchester.

    • @warriorsoflego
      @warriorsoflego Před 3 lety +1

      I was about to say that. She didn't exactly excel herself on that occasion either. 😊

    • @NymphZoic68
      @NymphZoic68 Před 3 lety

      The Tube was filmed in the old Tyne Tees studio in Newcastle

    • @interpoluk
      @interpoluk Před 3 lety

      @@NymphZoic68 Yes, the curved canopy tunnel (tube) is still there. They did plenty of outside broadcasts too, including that night a link up with the Haceienda, Manchester.

    • @NymphZoic68
      @NymphZoic68 Před 3 lety +1

      @@interpoluk Aha, I see :)x

  • @BaxterChobbery
    @BaxterChobbery Před 3 lety +2

    Pre and post gig antics in the Mixer, kebab shop beers, Jimmy Smith at the Jazz Cafe (his organ only lasted 20 mins) , Snuff playing the Black Beauty theme, so much money spent on records, hanging out with Japanese girls

  • @rumirill
    @rumirill Před 2 lety

    All gone now, but Rock On, Ted Carrolls shop was just round the corner from the station, have fond bygone memories of this and many another Camden attraction… cheers n thanks for an enjoyable stroll thru it’s history

  • @goesjem
    @goesjem Před 4 měsíci

    I was born and raised in Willesden in 1974 John. Camden is my life as a human and musician. Now I have lived in Austria since 2013. Your video was great man! Cheers!

  • @Winniedex
    @Winniedex Před rokem

    Popped into the book shop when I stayed a few days across the road from it in Harmood Street. Was there for Camden Rocks weekend. Harmood Street was really quiet & just a walk away from the hussle & bussle! Lovely walk with history, thank you ..

  • @seanmurphy5770
    @seanmurphy5770 Před 3 lety +1

    Thanks John, i was born in the old St. Pancreas ward,now part of Camden.
    I remember we shared a pint together back in the 1990's in Islington, long time ago.

  • @corneliabayley723
    @corneliabayley723 Před 2 lety

    I LOVED Black's Books!

  • @TomWats0n
    @TomWats0n Před 3 lety

    Great trip down memory lane for a Glasgow boy who ended up in Camden while working in the music biz in the early 80s. Must go back and visit sometime.

  • @dornierdo2172
    @dornierdo2172 Před 2 lety

    Totally agree with you on Black Books great comedy 👍

  • @MrCherryJuice
    @MrCherryJuice Před rokem +1

    Thank you for this. Filming on a rather dreich day reveals the reality of the place, which is fine by me.
    Another great thing about Camden is that one can walk to it by strolling along the canal from the newly rejuvenated King's Cross (Central St. Martins, Coal Drops Yard etc.). Then, after having a look in the market, continue up the road to Kentish Town, all the way to Hampstead. There is much to be discovered time and again through visiting these places.
    The fire at Koko was terrible news, though I see it is back up and active, with many notable improvements making it even more suitable for a 21st century music venue.

  • @2H80vids
    @2H80vids Před 3 lety +4

    I started watching this half-hour episode about four hours ago John. One of the things I love about these videos is the rabbit holes and there were plenty in this one.
    I always chart our progress on RailMapsOnline, nothing new there, but google was getting hammered too this time.
    One of my main interests is railway history and Camden is knee-deep in the stuff. You cover places in a very different way to Geoff Marshall and Jago Hazard (not better, not worse, just different) and often visit similar areas, for different reasons. By watching all three of you, I tend to get a more varied/balanced view of these places.
    The rabbit holes crop up frequently on all three channels and are just by-products of fascinating channels, an occupational hazard. Thanks for taking me along once more.
    Cheers for now,🍻
    Dougie.

  • @juliaoak452
    @juliaoak452 Před 3 lety +6

    Opposite Chalk Farm station was a great ice cream parlour, I wonder if it is still there, happy Sunday afternoons.

    • @mostlyindica
      @mostlyindica Před 3 lety +2

      Its relocated down towards lock now, or was before the lockdown. its under the wisteria tree

    • @estherdoyle8175
      @estherdoyle8175 Před 3 lety +3

      \Marine Ices it was called. Had about a drillion different flavours. I seem to remember getting a cucumber ice once. It was just as thrilling as it sounds. Never been in the new parlour though.

    • @irampotter
      @irampotter Před 3 lety

      Marine ices, I had a mate that said it was called that because all the ice cream was made with fish oil so he wouldn't go there.

  • @johnfoster7996
    @johnfoster7996 Před 3 lety

    Thank you John - Your walk recorded many flakes of my past!

  • @Carolitoh
    @Carolitoh Před 2 lety +1

    I always associate Camden Town with Charles Dickens’ A Christmas Carol. Bob Cratchit lived in Camden Town.

  • @danhope77
    @danhope77 Před rokem

    Lived around there for 1 year in 2010. Easy to get lost in Camden. Such a great place in summer. Once I fell asleep at Primerose Hill park around 2 am. All by myself. Crazy stuff. Feels like a century ago. The rent was very high. That put me off. Good memories though.

  • @Ben_Mdws
    @Ben_Mdws Před 2 lety

    Saw my first gig at the Electric Ballroom. Great memories.

  • @mikemorris9636
    @mikemorris9636 Před 3 lety +2

    good to see you're still Rocking and rollin along

  • @mjc5509
    @mjc5509 Před 3 lety +1

    CAMDEN MARKET WAS GREAT ON SUNDAY IN MID 80S..STABLES MARKET ETC WAS POPULAR FOR RETRO 50s MEMORABILIA..BUT UNDERWENT A SEA CHANGE AND LAST TIME I VISITED WAS BASICALLY STREET FOOD AND NOT MUCH ELSE.I REMEMBER THE JAZZ CAFE WELL SAW SOME GREATS THERE NOTABLY VOCALIST JIMMY SCOTT ..

  • @djlewis5149
    @djlewis5149 Před 3 lety +2

    Glad your leg is better John. Had visions of a tour around your back garden this week😄

    • @djlewis5149
      @djlewis5149 Před 3 lety

      One of Sharp’s main collaborators was Ralph Vaughan Williams whose music was heavily influenced by English folk. The Norfolk rhapsodies are a good atmospheric starting point

  • @videocurios
    @videocurios Před 3 lety

    Loved it ,Thankyou John for reminding me of my homeland as a King's Cross and Camden Town kid who moved to the Eastend in 1996.

  • @TheEst41
    @TheEst41 Před 2 lety

    In 89/90 the electric ballroom had a secondhand/vintage Market to die for...I loved the world's end pub..had my heart broken there🤣 dumped..... and not forgetting the soul to soul shop...remember going in on a Saturday morning and jazzy b was serving ..such a great memorie..
    Thanks for the walk❤

  • @Simont6.0
    @Simont6.0 Před 3 měsíci

    At 21mins....Next to the Electric Ballroom is a shutter door and brick building...it is an Electricity Substation for the underground...I used to work in there in the 9
    1990s....I remember the Worlds End, M@S Food Hall and Waterstones bookshop where I bought Terry Pratchett disc world books!

  • @steppingrazorsoundplatesystem

    In 1931 Marine Ices founder and gelato pioneer, Gaetano Mansi, opened his first ice cream parlour in Camden, North West London, with a desire to bring the indulgent taste of real Italian Gelato to discerning Londoners.
    His reputation spread fast across London, delighting a legion of customers who couldn’t get enough of the authentic Italian flavours of his delicious ices.
    Marine Ices’ iconic parlour in Camden became something of a landmark with queues of gelato devotees (travelling across London and beyond) lining up on hot summers days to savour Gaetano’s inimitable ice creams and sorbets.
    Today the same ices can be enjoyed in many restaurants, ice cream parlours, quality food shops and delicatessens around the country, not to mention our own iconic parlour in Camden.

  • @johncarter2573
    @johncarter2573 Před 3 lety +1

    Great stuff john, what an historic part of our great city. Thank you.

  • @simon1066
    @simon1066 Před 3 lety

    When the pubs properly reopen I’ll be on a perpetual pub crawl round Camden. The Music Machine aka Camden Palace was home on Saturday nights, many tales to tell! happy days.

  • @sandrasmith3207
    @sandrasmith3207 Před 3 lety

    Another great video with lots of memories. I used to visit Camden Town a lot for my work in the early 80's. Also went to see Henry IV at the Roundhouse with my school in 1973.

  • @hArtyTruffle
    @hArtyTruffle Před 3 lety

    I always take my Grandaughter there for a treat. It’s her favourite place in London for clothes shopping. Great to hear all about the history. Thanks John 👍🏼

    • @JohnRogersWalks
      @JohnRogersWalks  Před 3 lety

      Many thanks for watching- it’s great that this place spans generations

  • @CYPRUSINSIGHT
    @CYPRUSINSIGHT Před 3 lety +1

    Tea and bicky and a new walk, perfect evening 😁😁

  • @DaraM73
    @DaraM73 Před 3 lety +1

    19:12 I was having a pint of stout in a quiet village pub, after a long journey from Camden to Co. Mayo, Ireland, a couple of holidays ago. Only one other chap in the bar so set up glass for him, got chatting about his village forefathers, buried in mass graves down on the sand dunes by the sea line during the 1845 famine, and most others then scattered to the world. Asked where he’d come from...Camden town and family of the owners of the Oxford Arms, my local pub, which I’d had a pint of stout in not three days earlier!
    In celebration, we bought two packets of cheese & onion Tayto crisps.
    (Oh and you can see said history in the Mayo County mural on side of building)

  • @alisonedwards8810
    @alisonedwards8810 Před 3 lety

    I have many memories of shopping in Camden Town market. Thanks for the video!

  • @johncubbidge2237
    @johncubbidge2237 Před 2 lety

    Congratulations on buying some Terry Pratchett John, it takes one away from reality into a world of cleverly presented silliness.
    He made an impact on me when he made a TV program to check out assisted dying in Zurich as he was not comfortable with losing his glorious mind to a form of dementia.
    He followed through shortly after.

  • @sabuzacwalker3822
    @sabuzacwalker3822 Před 3 lety

    So wonderful Scene Walking tour.

  • @daveconyard8946
    @daveconyard8946 Před 3 lety

    Thanks John 👍

  • @wendyrual7179
    @wendyrual7179 Před 3 lety

    Loved the old Camden Market.....thanks for the tour 🤗💜

  • @ivanhockenhull2604
    @ivanhockenhull2604 Před 3 lety +1

    What a great odyssey, John. Never been to Camden but I lived in East Acton for a while. I was a fervent devotee of NME and I remdmber the magical roll call of venues...Camden Electric Ballroon, Dublin Castle. Transported me back to the 1980s. Great stuff, John. Glad the ankle has improved. 🇯🇪

  • @SOUTHALLAlanTMobilityScooter

    Thank you for getting me to Camden Town once again.

  • @littleacornslandscapes2935

    Beautiful and informative walk, thank you John.

  • @sahu
    @sahu Před 3 lety

    Love Camden Town...Lived there for 2 years...My dog and I miss the walks to regents park and walks along the canal. Thanks for yet another great video.

  • @FrenchRiviera4K
    @FrenchRiviera4K Před 3 lety +4

    Such a wonderful walk !!! Greetings from France !!! 🧡💛

  • @terryflynn1956
    @terryflynn1956 Před 3 lety

    Camden has to be one of the best days out in London. Have been to the markets many times and always discover something new. Thanks for a really interesting tour John crammed with so much information and facts galore about a truly iconic part of London . 😊👍

    • @JohnRogersWalks
      @JohnRogersWalks  Před 3 lety +1

      Thanks for watching Terry

    • @geoffbell9670
      @geoffbell9670 Před 2 lety

      Roundhouse was home to the Middle Earth club in 67. Great music Saturdays/Sunday am.

  • @anaisbeninger5997
    @anaisbeninger5997 Před 3 lety +5

    Thank you John for the incredible walk! I moved here from Singapore and your video makes me feel like I should explore it loads more! One of my favorite spots is The Hawley Arms which was Amy Winehouse’s local pub :)

  • @paula7696
    @paula7696 Před 11 měsíci

    Too many memories there ❤... it was a pleasure to watch this video 😊

  • @ChubbyChecker182
    @ChubbyChecker182 Před 3 lety +1

    Great Reconnaissance Mission for all the Pubs re-opening on 17th May... Cheers 🍻

  • @margaretdrew2844
    @margaretdrew2844 Před 2 lety

    Two years ago my husband and i came to london to see cher at the o2 the next day we caught the bus to camden . Love it ,it is so diverse loved the walk and all the things you knew about the groups that had performed in the different venues. It must have been so enjoyable watching them all i ,would have been so happy to look back on those times , thank you for that john.

  • @keithwhittygmail
    @keithwhittygmail Před 3 lety

    @ 0:39 My favorite movie of all time. Not many know of it. Only the real deal old school of us 😜👍

  • @stue9391
    @stue9391 Před 3 lety

    That was champion! Just like everyone else, we all got great memories of that place..bands booze n food mainly heh
    Gonna be watching this again tomorra with me mam she will live this

  • @GrahamTriggsUK
    @GrahamTriggsUK Před 3 lety +6

    So here is where Camden gets confusing - the closed pub next to Paddy Power also used to be The Monarch (formerly The Misty Moon and The Man in the Moon)

    • @priscillarampazzo4359
      @priscillarampazzo4359 Před 3 lety

      I was so gutted that the legendary Monarch has closed!!! Fond memories from Metal Works