What did The Blitz Club Spandau Ballet do at 4 Great Queen Street?


The Story
# The Blitz Club, 4 Great Queen Street On the night of December 5th, 1979, the cramped basement of 4 Great Queen Street became the unlikely birthplace of the New Romantic movement when Spandau Ballet took the stage at The Blitz Club for the first time, transforming a dingy Covent Garden venue into the epicenter of a cultural revolution. Gary Kemp, his brother Martin, Steve Norman, and their bandmates descended into this underground space—a place that had once housed a jazz club and would become the most influential nightclub of the early 1980s—where a carefully curated crowd of art students, musicians, and designers gathered to reject the tired aesthetics of punk and disco. Here, beneath the streets of London, they didn't just debut a new sound; they unveiled a complete aesthetic vision of theatrical glamour, electronic sophistication, and androgynous style that would define a generation. The Blitz Club on Great Queen Street became the creative furnace where the band's identity crystallized, where their audience was born, and where the very concept of the "Blitz Kids" emerged—making this basement one of the most consequential addresses in British pop music history, a place where five young men helped usher in the 1980s before anyone else knew the decade had already begun.
Location
4 Great Queen Street