Co-op Live: Manchester venue boss resigns after shows postponed
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Published
The general manager of Manchesterâs troubled Co-op Live arena has resigned after criticising smaller venues.
Gary Roden has quit his role days after a backlash over his comments in a BBC interview about âpoorly runâ grassroots music venues.
Comedian Peter Kayâs opening shows had to be cancelled this week as the ÂŁ365m venue was not ready in time.
Meanwhile tickets for the arenaâs first test event last Saturday were cancelled at the last minute to reduce capacity.
A statement from the arena said it does not âshare the sentimentâ expressed by Mr Roden and that âCo-op Live remains committed to grassroots music in Manchester and beyondâ.
The statement thanked Mr Roden for his âhelp bringing the UKâs newest arena to live entertainment fans and wish him the best for the futureâ and said Rebecca Kane Burton, an ex boss of Londonâs O2 Arena, would be interim general manager.
Ahead of its grand opening shows, Mr Roden told the BBC he acknowledged the financial pressures facing small venues but added some were poorly run.
He also said there was no robust system to decide who would get a suggested subsidy of ÂŁ1 from every arena ticket to support pubs and clubs, which the Music Venue Trust (MVT) is calling for.
Instead Mr Roden said the new arena would give ÂŁ1m a year to the Co-op Foundation charity, which helps a range of causes, and would work with smaller venues on projects like training.
In response, the MVT told NME that grassroots music venues are not âpoorly runâ, and it is âdisrespectful and disingenuous to suggest otherwiseâ, pointing out âinsurmountable and highly specialist challengesâ they face.
It said: âObviously, the irony of making ill-judged, unnecessary and misleading comments about grassroots music venues on the day that the launch of their new arena has unfortunately fallen into such difficulties is not lost on anyone in the music industry, on artists, or on audiences.â
Kay was due to perform the first official events at the arena but it said work on its power supply was âa few days behindâ schedule.
The comicâs performances were rescheduled for 29 and 30 April.
The venue, which will hold up to 23,500 people when fully open, apologised as Kay admitted to being âtruly guttedâ for the disappointment.
Kay added at the time that âobviously, itâs a brand-new venue and itâs important that everything is finished and safe for full capacity audiencesâ.
âFortunately, weâve been able to reschedule the shows to next week,â he said.
US rock band The Black Keys were still due to play the arena on 27 April, before Kayâs rescheduled dates.
The venue said that gig would have a 10,000-capacity and managers would use it to âcontinue to test the resilience of the venue and its operationsâ.
Listen to the best of  BBC Radio Manchester on Sounds and follow BBC Manchester on Facebook, X and Instagram. You can also send story ideas to northwest.newsonline@bbc.co.uk
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