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News
Music venue charity issues ‘shocked’ statement ahead of impending Manchester closure
Thomas Melia
A nationwide music charity has issued a statement after discovering the news of another impending Manchester venue loss, as student-favourite Retro Bar looks to be closing.
Reputable UK non-profit, Music Venue Trust, has come out to express their shock at the plans to shut the long-standing and well-established nightlife and music venue.
Adjacent to the University of Manchester campus, Retro Bar has catered to students and locals alike for more than 35 years. The nightclub, bar and live performance space is set to be displaced in a new venture between Bruntwood SciTech and the university.
In a statement posted on social media, Music Venue Trust wrote: “It’s just not good enough to dismiss the extraordinary value these organisations bring to their communities, the cultural ecosystem and the night time economy.”
The Music Venue Trust (MVT) was formed just over a decade ago to protect and improve independent and grassroots music venues across the UK, so they were quick to step in upon learning that Manchester’s beloved Retro Bar faces closing.
The organisation works closely with larger venues and grassroots music venues to help support the infrastructure of the music industry and live music as a whole.
They even partnered with Katy Perry, who is heading out on tour and visiting AO Arena later this year, with £1 from every ticket sold going to this charity to be distributed to independent music venues.
MVT went on to explain that “Retro has not factored into the Sister masterplan in any meaningful way and faces the very real prospect of permanent closure this July”.
The impending closure of Retro makes way for a £1.7 billion joint development, which is being labelled as the ‘Sister Masterplan‘, between the uni and the Greater Manchester property development group.
Retro hosts in excess of 200 live gigs per year and welcomes upwards of 20,000 customers annually, having served as a staple venue in Mancunian nightlife culture.
In response to the plans, the MVT is currently leading a crowdfunding attempt to save the space and has even received the backing of a very familiar face.
On the fundraising site, anyone thinking of donating will find a video from the one and only Frank Turner – a passionate grassroots advocate – who is fully behind the campaign.
It was only this past April that he gave a passionate speech on the power of these venues and in this minute-long clip, he reveals, “It’s the place where I played my first solo show in Manchester back in 2005”, and its fair to say that without it he may never had made it to headlining a sold out Academy 1.
He goes on to say as much, adding: “I owe my career to places like Retro Bar […] without independent grassroots music venues we can’t get anywhere”.
If you want to donate or support this campaign further, you can view Music Venue Trust and Retro Bar’s joint crowdfunding campaign HERE.
Read more:
- Stereophonics frontman Kelly Jones reveals that Noel Gallagher is back in the studio
- An old indie favourite is heading back to Manchester for a ‘Best Of Tour’ at a brilliant venue
- Scouting For Girls announce stacked UK tour with Manchester date
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Featured Images — Unsplash / Flickr /Crowdfunder
News
NHS rolls out five-minute ‘super jab’ to treat 15 different types of cancer
Emily Sergeant
A new five-minute ‘super jab’ that helps to treat 15 different types of cancer is being rolled out across the country.
The NHS is the first in Europe to offer the new injection.
The health service is rolling out an injectable form of immunotherapy, called nivolumab, which means patients can receive their fortnightly or monthly treatment within just five minutes, instead of up to an hour via an IV drip.
The new jab can be used to treat 15 cancer types, including skin cancer, bladder, and oesophagus, and it’s estimated around 1,200 patients in England per month could benefit.
Following the approval from the UK’s medicines regulator, the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA), it’s said that the roll-out will save more than a year’s worth of treatment time for patients and NHS teams annually, and enable patients to spend less time in hospital while freeing up staff capacity to deliver more appointments and treatments.
The NHS is introducing a new five-minute injection for 15 types of cancer, including skin, bladder and oesophageal.
— NHS England (@NHSEngland) April 30, 2025
NHS staff administering the jab could save around 1,000 hours of treatment time for patients and clinicians every month.
➡️ https://t.co/gMCtLD3vrZ pic.twitter.com/6iUazTT1jF
In clinical trials, patients were found to be ‘highly satisfied’ with the under-the-skin injection, which takes up to five minutes maximum to administer, and said they much preferred it to the IV form of the drug which takes 30 to 60 minutes every two weeks or four weeks, depending on the cancer type.
Around two in five patients who currently receive IV nivolumab – which is one of the most widely used cancer treatments – should be eligible for the new jab, the NHS has confirmed.
On top of this, most eligible new patients are also expected to begin on the injectable form of nivolumab, rather than the IV.

Going forward, NHS cancer services will now be preparing to treat the first patients with the new treatment from next month, which is when supplies of the product are received in the UK, as this will help with the capacity demands in cancer day units, where the drug is currently administered.
“Immunotherapy has already been a huge step forward for many NHS patients with cancer, and being able to offer it as an injection in minutes means we can make the process far more convenient,” commented Professor Peter Johnson, who is NHS England’s National Clinical Director for Cancer.
“This treatment is used for 15 different types of the disease, so it will free up thousands of valuable clinicians’ time every year, allowing teams to treat even more patients and helping hospital capacity.
Read more:
- NHS strikes deal with private sector to cut waiting lists across the UK
- The NHS found to be in a ‘critical condition’ following an independent investigation
- Government urges UK public to ‘help fix the NHS’
“And this is just the latest development in the NHS’s ongoing commitment to provide patients with the latest cancer therapies and treatment options that truly transform lives”.
Featured Image – Gustavo Fring (via Unsplash)