
Jen Clark
We're changing our name.
See what people think and feel about Sage Gateshead.

Walking onto that stage filled me with awe.
Thank you for
all you do
for families.
Guaranteed a great performance no matter the genre.


Too many
great nights
to single out.
Life-affirming.

Thank you
for all your
support Sage
Gateshead.

Thrilled!

Sharing a
night out with
my best friend
and watching
her cry with
emotion at
numerous
performances.




I still have a feeling of
witnessing something
very special
I’d never
sang before
but I just love
it here.

You can’t
fail to be
impressed.
It’s who you’ve got
around you and the
resources.




Sky’s the
limit really.
You can learn all sorts

A haven from
a made world.




Meeting
lifelong
friends





Music
brought us
all together.


They installed
a zip-wire
across the
concourse.
A spectacular sight.

Music is the
sound that
love makes.
It is for
everyone in
the North East


The supreme quality
of Sage Gateshead's
acoustics.
People make Sage
Gateshead such a
warm environment.
No other
venue can
match.

The power
of music was
never stronger



Everything for everyman.
Such a moving,
memorable
experience.

Every time I
see it I think of
how proud I
am of him.

Haway
the lads



One of the
most amazing
moments of
my life.

We are so
fortunate
here.

The northern
spirit and
atmosphere.
Superb
acoustics
and such a
varied offering,
something for
every taste.


Music can transform people.





We are a collective of music lovers





Seeing Diversity rehearsing outside on the street.






Supporting Talisk, my favourite band, on the stage at Sage One this year is the highlight of my life so far.



I’ve supported the orchestra since it formed in 1958.

Caribou was the first partially standing gig after lockdown. Everyone was ecstatic throughout.


It’s as much as part of the landscape here as the Tyne Bridge.

Laughing, getting it wrong, and learning in a fun way.

Absolutely extraordinary


I had the honour to sing with Bobby McFerrin.

Wagner’s The Ring Cycle brought me to the opera.



I was very grateful for all the online sessions Sage Gateshead provided during lockdown.


The versatility of the place


Performing Elgar’s The Kingdom here with my peers in my first year at university.



An amazing building with amazing outlooks
Young people feel welcome and comfortable.



I’ve sung here for the last 10 years
Helps to develop my confidence
It’s my building – that’s how it feels.

Inspired me to study music


The online classes are great. My granddaughter has been joining in from Norwich.


I’m a local lass and so proud to have something like this on my doorstep.

I’m so proud


After the song he smiled – it was incredible.
Collective shared joy
Being part of the Silver Breves gave me my first experience of singing in Hall one. Walking onto that stage filled me with awe as we retraced the footsteps of so many wonderful performers who were there before us. That was long ago and now for the most memorable and recent experience.
It was singing in “The People’s Requiem” (Verdi’s Requiem) after weeks of long, sometimes exhausting, always exciting and enjoyable rehearsals, the time came for the performance. Singing Verdi’s Requiem accompanied by the Royal Northern Sinfonia, conducted by Dinis Sousa! The stuff dreams are definitely made of. The audience were astounded - shown by the seemingly never ending applause and the excited chatter heard as they left Sage Gateshead.
I’ve always wanted it to be a tradition when I had a family to come to see The Snowman at the Sage at Christmas. My dream finally came true and at Christmas 2021 we came - my husband, my little girl Bonnie and I. It was a magical moment and I look forward to continuing this special Christmas tradition. Thank you for all you do for families.
As I'm getting older my hearing is deteriorating - a combination of age and standing too close to the speakers in small venues in my youth. This means I can't enjoy live music so well anymore. But because of the great acoustics at The Sage I know I'm usually guaranteed a great performance no matter the genre.
I started working for Sage Gateshead back in 2004, when it first opened.
I was 18 and was in awe of the amazing building. It reaffirmed my love for music and I have precious memories of my amazing colleagues, as well as the wonderful experiences I had at my time at Sage Gateshead.
Music is definitely the language of the soul.
I still have a feeling of witnessing something very special which is a huge understatement. I will never ever forget the Beethoven weekend, prior to the first lockdown. So very glad to have seen and heard every single part of it.
Arriving at Sage Gateshead to see The Knife Angel and it being there for every concert. Brilliantly moving. The music was beyond doubt the best I have heard. I could not have asked for anything more.
Thank you for such wonderful memories.
We’ve seen some amazing artists over the years at Sage Gateshead but the best moment is when my wife (Frances) and I got married there in 2014. We made music the central theme of our wedding and the playlist had guests on the dance floor mixing with people they’d only just met for hours.
The intimacy offered by Sage One or Sage Two makes performances feel special for performers and audience.
I’d rather see a performer play at Sage Gateshead than anywhere else because of the intimacy of the venue and the wonderful sound quality, not to mention the warmth of the audience.
To walk into Sage Gateshead on a Thursday night carrying your instrument bag just gave such feeling of pride. Those nights spent learning and playing music were the highlight of the week for all of us. I have met lots of fantastic people who have become great friends; a love of the saxophone and music brought us all together.
Pet Shop Boys a couple of years ago. This concert was one of many great nights at Sage Gateshead. It was an outstanding celebration of their music and, of course, it was a coming home concert for Neil Tennant.
We enjoyed it with our son and it was a great night all round. Never to be forgotten!
I remember when it was being built thinking that Sage Gateshead would be just for highbrow Opera lovers and not for us - how wrong could I be? From your opening to his untimely death 8 years ago, my late husband and I attended more than 100 gigs together at our new favourite venue.
There is now a seat in Sage One dedicated to his memory - ‘Music is the sound that love makes’. A special place with amazing memories, and hopefully many more to come.
I love Sage Gateshead.
Favourite moment? Where do I start? Lars always. The first time I heard Julian Rachlin we knew that he was something special. Mahan Esfahani - love that harpsichord. The Beethoven weekend just before lockdown and just anything and everything with the RNS.
All the joy you gave to my mum when she was alive; it was her favourite place too.
Hearing a large symphony orchestra for the first time. The clarity of the performance and being able to hear every instrument, from the smallest to the largest equally. The power great music has on your emotions.
All this has been brought about by the supreme quality of Sage Gateshead’s acoustics. Performances are made by the quality of the musicians and by the quality of the sound engineers.
Coming out of lockdown and bringing together amateur and professional musicians at The People’s Requiem, to remember those we lost, was incredibly moving.
Sage Gateshead has been part of watching our children grow up - from listening to our daughter sing in Quay Lasses, pacing the corridor during piano exams, or celebrating Christmas with a trip to The Snowman. It’s woven into our family history.
I want to see the experiences our family had on offer to all families across the region - and I want to continue to be able to hear world-class performers in an amazing venue without having to leave the North East.
It’s an amazing venue for music of all kinds. I have attended many events here - it’s my favourite local venue.
From 2018, meeting up and dancing in the foyer with all of my Orbital pals from all over the country. I only ever bump into them all at Orbital gigs throughout the country. It was an amazing gig and I was won over by the foyer being used as a venue. Please come back and repeat!
Underworld performing Dubnobasswithmyheadman in 2015, in its entirety. This was on my made-up list of perfect gigs and when the tickets were announced it was like my dream came true! They were tremendous in every way possible.
Lemon Jelly was my first ever Sage Gateshead gig in 2005 and it paved the way for many gigs to follow over the years. I was astounded at how perfect the music sounded, and the fact that Lemon Jelly held a game of bingo. They were amazing and I miss them.
They say never meet your hero it can only lead to disappointment, but in my case it was because it turns you into a jibbering wreck . The person in question was Booker T Jones who signed albums after the gig. The guy has played on every Stax hit and I’m meeting him. So I’m standing to meet him and get the album signed. It’s a cold day but I’m getting hotter and hotter, my shirt is soaking. Finally I meet him shake that hand that has played on some of the greatest songs ever. He played with Otis Redding, my god, and I shook his hand.
He was so magnanimous in those few minutes I had with him - a real gentleman. I asked him in my best Geordie accent if he ever met up with their “rivals” the Funk Brothers who played on all the Motown hits. Not sure he really understood me, but he simply said they were all good friends despite working for rivals - very diplomatic. So with album in hand, my soaking shirt and I left with a huge grin on my face, off into to the welcome chill of the night air.
Mark Lanegan in Sage Two - this venue is so perfect. Lanegan says little, sings a lot and pulls you in to the music. Add to this the vibe of Sage Two and for 90 minutes I don’t feel like I’m watching a performance, I feel part of the performance. Perfect, perfect, perfect. Then Lanegan dies and this is the last time I got to hear him sing live.
I get very moved and proud when attending a concert at Sage Gateshead. My two favourites have to be Nik Kershaw and Howard Jones. My wife and I attended both, and at 56 to be singing along to songs that provided the soundtrack to my late teens and early twenties, and still remembering all the lyrics like it was yesterday, had me in tears.
England over the decades has produced amazing talents, and these two in my view rank among the best.
Best wishes with your decision making and for Sage Gateshead’s future in our homeland. I’m very proud to be a Geordie, and Sage Gateshead and the quayside is two of the reasons why, along with Sting, Mark Knopfler and Lindisfarne. Haway the lads!
The diversity of performances, the chance to see something new. The support of local and international musicians and the emphasis on classical performances. There’s nowhere else that I can think of that can beat the diverse and exciting programming in 100 miles! The acoustics, the atmosphere, the beautiful building. Memories of going here for all of my young adult / adult life.
A truly special place and a place to go at special times.
Seeing my all time favourite band Crosby Stills & Nash. When they sang Suite: Judy Blue Eyes as an encore I couldn’t speak for some time after! Sitting there with all my friends around me; listening to them sing an all time classic of mine for over 40 years. Sharing that with friends, who I have listened to it many times with throughout our lives, was one of the most amazing moments of my life.
I sang with the Inspiration Choir and the RNS but watching my daughter, who was a child at the time, walk in to Sage One with an armed forces veteran to pass on a poppy for the Remembrance concert, was very moving.
Sage Gateshead is a place that has fostered my love of singing - an amazing mindfulness tool which has helped me through some tough battles in my life. This is where I have some amazing memories and is a place I have met good friends with a common love of singing.
My name’s John, I’ve been coming to concerts at Sage Gateshead since it very first opened. But my outstanding memory is of the day it re-opened after lockdown, and I came to see the People’s Requiem - the Verdi Requiem - and my wife was in the choir. From the first chord onwards I filled up, and throughout the whole performance I was the same, I was full of tears. And it was just coming back together as part of the community and hearing such creativity and such joy, it was a wonderful place to be that night.
Kiefer Sutherland tweeted about Greggs and within the hour there was a massive Greggs delivery at the stage door.
I’m Rob Williamson, I’m Chief Executive of the Community Foundation, Tyne and Wear, and Northumberland, one of Sage Gateshead’s major funders. We are hugely proud in the region to have Sage Gateshead here and to have the largest arts endowment outside London, as I understand it; supporting arts education and participation, and brilliant entertainment, right here on the banks of the Tyne.
Hi my name’s Jessica, and this was the first place that I ever played in front of a live audience. I came to The Sage when I was around 8 years old, and I’ve been coming here ever since. I came here to do music lessons and to play in the young musicians programmes and In Harmony, which is a project that gives young children the chance to play an instrument and really discover themselves.
I personally love The Sage because this is a place that helped to build my confidence and who I am. Without music I wouldn’t be able to express myself the way that I can right now, so I feel that The Sage is a very unique and meaningful place and I really love the unity and the diversity. I love how everyone comes here to do one thing; when you’re on the school bus and you’re coming to The Sage to come play your instruments and you’re unpacking your instruments and just the excitement of getting on the stage and playing – that togetherness, no matter where you come from, who you are, your gender, whatever, just coming here to play altogether and do one synchronised thing is a really beautiful thing and I think it is an example of what the world should actually be like, I feel like Sage is an example of how I feel the world should be.
My name’s Peter Woolford.
I’m a regular here, coming mostly to see the Royal Northern Sinfonia. I’ve had some fantastic experiences learning about classical music but my favourite from them are the Star Wars nights – absolutely the best. You see the orchestra come out and the conductor’s conducting with the lightsaber. It’s the best and it will bring in a lot of interest when people come here and they can learn from it because then they can go back and see a different experience with classical music, and with the rock music that plays in this venue as well.
Hi I’m Gwen, and what I love about Sage Gateshead is that you can perform anything here; it can be dance, music - any type of music - and it’ll always be good.
One of my favourite memories is when I performed here with my school, I was about 10 and it was the first time I’d ever sung in front of other people, and it was really special - I’ve loved coming here. I’ve been coming here since I was little, my mum came here when she was pregnant with me, so it’s always been a part of my life and it always will be.
Hello, I’m Wendy Holland. I’ve been a participant in the community music programme since 2008.
I’ve enjoyed participating in a lot of genres of music; things I would never have thought of participating in, like being in a rock group. I’ve enjoyed performances in Sage One, both attending and being on the stage as well. I’ve also been an ambassador for the programme and have done research into what the successes are of the community music programme.
When Lars Vogt fell ill, the RNS played without him for the first half of the performance, as the replacement conductor - Peter Donohoe - hadn’t yet arrived. That was an amazing feat in itself. Then when he finally made it on stage, having never met the orchestra and with no rehearsal, they played Beethoven’s Emperor Concerto - and it worked. It was absolutely extraordinary.
Hello, I’m Ross Millard, I’m a musician from the area. Some of the more special moments in Sage Gateshead for me have been the concerts or festivals that have confounded our expectations as audience members. Thinking particularly of Orbital performing on the concourse and it being kind of wild and an amazing light show, full of bodies. The Americana festival, which brings the whole space to life, including the outside area, and some of those other festival moments. The Jazz Festival, where you get all sorts of eccentric, wild performances in all of the different spaces. Tusk, which has been housed here for about 5 years now, and is a really valuable aspect of the Sage programme…just quite amazing to think all of those performances can happen under one roof.
Hi, my name’s Marzuqah and my favourite moment in Sage Gateshead was when it first started and In Harmony first came to Hawthorn Primary School. They told us we could come to Sage Gateshead for an opportunity to try out new instruments, so I came with my family and we tried out lots of new instruments and ever since then I’ve been playing an instrument.
Hi my name’s Alex and I’ve been coming to Sage Gateshead for 18 years. My first experience was when I was literally a few months old and I’ve been coming pretty much every week since.
I started off doing baby classes, then went on to actual ensembles, and now this year I’m off to university and I will be studying at Newcastle University. Sage Gateshead will still continue to be a performance place for me and the place that I will always visit, so it has huge, huge sentimental memories and value to me.
I’m Sarah Thackray from Beaconhouse Events, and this building to us is incredible for conferences and events. We bring international delegations across and they’re just blown away by the building itself and the location in the centre of Newcastle/Gateshead. It’s stunning and it offers so much inspiration to people who come here. It’s not just another conference hotel, it’s an amazing building with amazing outlooks, so we love it.
I’ve sung here for the last 10 years with Streetwise Opera. I think I have sung in every auditorium in this building. I was very grateful for all the online sessions Sage Gateshead provided during lockdown. It’s really important even now as it gives lots of people access to the building who might not otherwise be able to get here.
Hello, I’m Christine Ogg, and this is the place where I had a lightbulb moment; I came to a sharing performance where some people were drumming and I thought, that is what I want to do, and I’ve been doing it ever since. I’ve made many good friends and have had many happy memories doing so, so long live this building.
I’m Josh. I first came into contact with Sage Gateshead through my grandad bringing me to The Snowman performance here, and from then I played in Sage One, Sage Two, and The Northern Rock venue through various school bands. Being involved in the musical development side, on the odd occasion through different community groups - never once picked up an instrument since leaving school but was involved from a business point of view and it’s been incredible to make friends old and new in this place. Appreciate the acoustics, the infrastructure and dedication of everyone in this place.
I’m John Shipley and I’ve been coming to classical concerts here since it opened. It’s the most wonderful, relaxing experience to be in Sage One, particularly with the Royal Northern Sinfonia playing. A hugely exciting place to come to, wonderfully welcoming and the highest quality. It was particularly good for me when we ran Open University degree ceremonies (I worked with the OU) and we used to hold them here in the latter days of my time with the university. And it’s a wonderful venue for people. So much space to walk around in, to sit in, to have a coffee – high quality catering – but the most wonderful hall with the most fantastic acoustics. A world-class venue.
A participant attended a guitar class of mine, we had worked together for a while. At the start of the group session I asked if he was OK. He explained to the group how he had lost his mother a few days ago. We talked about it and decided to play ‘Isn’t She Lovely’ together. He played a solo on it while tears rolled down his face. After the song he smiled - it was incredible.
