We’ve had a dig through the DC Thomson archives to find nostalgic pictures of the venue and chart the story of the building which started life in the early 1870s. Graeme Strachan reports.
Clark’s bar being brought back to life will open a fresh chapter in the history of the building which became one of Dundee’s top live music venues.
Clark’s opened in 2011 and played host to many up-and-coming bands as well as a variety of popular cover bands and big acts like ’80s synth-pop heroes China Crisis.
Based in North Lindsay Street, the much-loved venue has remained boarded up and closed since 2020 when the first lockdown forever changed life as we know it.
Owner Scott Clark now plans to open once again in the not-too-distant future following the success of “pop up” events at the nearby Captain’s Cabin last November.
We’ve had a dig through the DC Thomson archives to find nostalgic pictures of the venue and chart the story of the building which started life in the early 1870s.
So why should delighted pubgoers be raising a glass to Dundee’s greatest-ever ice hockey player following the news that Clark’s will be reopening in the summer?
Brian King tells us more.
Brian’s book, titled Dundee Pubs, gives the Big Red Book treatment to some of the city’s oldest, quirkiest and most famous watering holes including Clark’s.
Brian said: “Clark’s actually closed between me writing the book and it coming out.
“A month after I handed in the finished materials to the publishers the government had closed every pub in the country and sadly Clark’s was one that did not open again.
“The building which contains Clark’s was not always a pub, though.
“It was built in 1874-5 as Lindsay Street Mill by local architects MacLaren and Aitken for the firm of John Henderson and Sons.”
Messrs John Henderson and Sons, a firm of flax spinners and manufacturers, was founded in the early 1850s by John Henderson, later in partnership with his two sons.
Their business at Lindsay Street Works was claimed to have been one of the first firms of manufacturers to engage in the spinning of jute in the city.
The jute mill was completely gutted by fire in 1866 and replaced by a range of buildings.
It was perhaps the first mill designed by architects rather than engineers.
MacLaren and Aitken excelled in the job they were given and they produced a rose window gable and a magnificent stair tower with lantern and French pavilion roof.
In 1931, it was sold to Brown Brothers who occupied it for the next 51 years.
Brian said: “The credit for spotting the premises’ potential as a pub must go to the local newsagent whose shop was at number 72 North Lindsay Street.
“If that was his only contribution to Dundee life then music fans at least would still have cause to be thankful to him but this newsagent – Marshall Key – was also one of the city’s greatest ever sportsmen.”
Spotted by coach George McNeil, he began playing ice hockey progressing to the junior Dundee Rockets team aged 13 and the senior Dundee Tigers at age 16.
In total, he played in 506 pro games for Dundee Tigers, Harringay Racers, Edinburgh Royals and Paisley Pirates in the Canadian-dominated seasons from 1948-1960.
He scored 217 goals, 332 assists, for 549 points, being assessed 167 minutes in penalties.
Having worked in the newspaper circulation business with the Daily Mail on leaving school, he had been in full-time hockey since completing two years of National Service in the RAF in 1952.
Key took over the running of his father’s shop in North Lindsay Street in 1962.
Twenty years later he and his wife Doreen bought the Brown Brothers premises.
Brian said: “They sold off the upper floors but transformed part of the ground floor into a pub they called The Keyhole – a play on their surname that also came with an obvious logo and a slogan ‘Look into the…’ followed by the keyhole symbol.
“After selling the Keyhole in 1987, Marshall ran the Invergowrie Inn. In 2000, he performed the opening ceremony for the Dundee Ice Arena, where one of the function suites is named after him.”
He died in 2016.
Key always made his customers feel special – just like Scott Clark.
That’s why so many of them followed him from the glory days of the Westport Bar in the 1990s through his various pubs like Braes on Perth Road and finally Clark’s in 2011.
Scott himself is from a famous Dundee musical family.
Twin brother Gary and third Clark brother Kit were bandmates in Danny Wilson.
The pub was formerly Irish bar O’Neill’s and Scott carefully built the new venue’s reputation for live music along with Kit, who booked the bands and performed DJ sets.
Clark’s hit the ground running and was immediately popular.
Scott also became one of the organisers of Dundee’s live music festival, Almost Blue, after it was announced that the Dundee Blues Bonanza would not take place in 2014.
He actually invented the name.
Clark’s became one of the staple venues on the festival’s circuit.
The pub became a Dundee institution in just a few short years.
There was always a full house in Clark’s on a Friday and Saturday night with people partying and dancing and enjoying the bands playing on stage.
It seemed the music would never stop.
Then Covid hit in March 2020.
All restaurants, cafés, pubs and cinemas were asked to close and people were told to practise social distancing, with stricter measures for the more vulnerable.
The government assistance kept Clark’s going for a while before Scott announced the venue would be shutting for good in September 2020.
He said: “Obviously it’s tough making the decision to close but it had to be done for financial reasons as we don’t own the building.
“It’s nice to know the customers and musicians who have visited or played over the years have enjoyed it and have fond memories, so a big thank you to them, as well as all our hard-working staff.
“I wouldn’t say this is the end, though. It won’t be in the same building again, but in a year’s time, who knows, the situation will hopefully have changed, and there will maybe be an opportunity to do something in Dundee.”
He said what had set Clark’s apart was the unique atmosphere.
“I have always believed in putting loads of work into getting that right,” he said.
“That is to do with getting into the heads of the staff, into the heads of everybody that works for you on the door, the people that come in and play.
“Whenever we got feedback about Clark’s the word atmosphere would come up all the time. And for me that is the key thing. It brings people back and it is not an accident.”
When asked for his favourite memories from the nine years of Clark’s, he cited legendary gigs by China Crisis and Chris Difford from the rock group Squeeze.
Scott added: “The main thing was just the sense of feeling great every time the atmosphere was right and there was live music on and people were loving it; whether it was a well-known national band or just one of our mate’s bands.
“It was that feeling that people were having a great time.”
Three years after Covid kicked them out of their iconic home, Scott and his team are buzzing and can’t wait to get back behind the bar, hopefully within weeks, and say they are not planning to change much.
Their customers are buzzing too.
This iconic venue has been sadly missed.
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