Alley 61

Been here? Share your experience and help other music fans find this spot.

King Tut's Wah Wah Hut — Where Oasis Were Discovered, Glasgow

272a St Vincent Street, City Centre
Glasgow, Scotland, UK

55.8635° N · -4.2591° W

Get Directions

What happened here?

King Tut's Wah Wah Hut at 272a St Vincent Street in Glasgow is the venue where Oasis were discovered. On May 31, 1993, the band — then unsigned and virtually unknown outside Manchester — blagged their way onto the bill of a gig they hadn't been booked for. Creation Records boss Alan McGee was in the audience to see another band but was so impressed by Oasis that he signed them on the spot. The story has become one of the foundational myths of Britpop, and the venue's role in launching the biggest British band of the 1990s has given it an outsized place in music history.

King Tut's opened in 1990 and quickly became Glasgow's most important small venue — the room where emerging bands play before they graduate to the Barrowland and beyond. The 300-capacity club has an intimate, low-ceilinged atmosphere that forces audiences close to the stage, and its booking policy has consistently prioritised new and unsigned acts. Radiohead, Blur, Manic Street Preachers, the Verve, Coldplay, and Florence and the Machine all played early shows at King Tut's, and the venue's stamp of approval carries significant weight in the British music industry.

King Tut's continues to operate as a live music venue and is owned by DF Concerts, Scotland's largest concert promoter. The room's modest size and continued commitment to breaking new acts make it one of the most important grassroots music venues in the UK. The Oasis discovery story is commemorated informally — regulars and staff know exactly which part of the room McGee was standing in.

Plan your visit

No details provided for this visit.

Reviews

No reviews yet