The Castle Hotel has been part of Manchester’s music story for decades and it wears that history well. Downstairs is a proper pub — no frills, no craft beer pretensions, just decent pints at prices that place’t gone completely mental. The jukebox is good, the crowd is mixed, and there’s a feeling that this place has seen everything the Northern Quarter has thrown at it and survived.
Upstairs is where the gigs happen. A small room with a stage that’s hosted bands long before anyone knew their names. The Smiths played here. Joy Division drank here. Every few years another band breaks out of The Castle’s upstairs room and into something bigger. The booking policy favours indie, alternative, and anything with a bit of edge — you won’t find acoustic Ed Sheeran covers up there.
Sound quality is surprisingly good for the size of the room. Capacity is maybe 80 people, which means every gig feels like something you were lucky to catch. Entry for live music is usually free or a few quid on the door. There’s no table service, no cocktail menu, no mood lighting. It’s a pub that puts on bands, and Manchester is better for having it. If the NQ ever loses The Castle, it’s lost something that can’t be replaced.