About Wigan Casino, Mr M's & The All Nighters
It is somewhat ironic that a musical form, originally created in North America, found its greatest success in the UK and is now being revived world wide, including back in North America via the various scooter and soul clubs.
Our name "Mr M & The All Nighters" is actually a play on several revered names from the history of British Northern Soul music.
In 1973 a Victorian dance hall in the English Northern town of Wigan in Lancashire opened its doors to an experimental - "all night" Saturday night/Sunday morning dance session. Within a very short time Wigan Casino gained a reputation as a hub for keeping classic soul music alive, at the time disco music was at its height.
Such was the popularity of the "all-nighters" the management opened up another room at the venue calling it "Mr M's" named after the general manager at the time Gerry Marshall.
The "club" membership reached a staggering 150,000 at its peak in the 1970's. The venue was always filled to capacity and featured both DJ's and some of the original performers including Gloria Jones, Martha Reeves and Jackie Wilson. One legendary night James Brown himself supposedly turned up, checked out the crowd and left with out a word.
The Casino "all nighters" ran until November 1981. Soon after, the building mysteriously burned down and soul fans lost a major venue.
Called the greatest British music "fad". Northern Soul continues to be played at dozens of "all nighters" across the UK, Europe, Australia, USA and maybe one day in Canada.
Northern Soul was a phrase coined by journalist Dave Godin back in the early 70s to describe the phenomenon of young white soul enthusiasts who wanted to dance all night to obscure sixties soul music.
Today Northern Soul is the subject of two movie productions. One being filmed in Stoke the other in Blackburn,; the next two years will see Northern Soul hit yet another peak in it's ironic history.
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