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The Armadillo Tea Rooms

Coordinates: 53°24′23″N 2°59′12″W / 53.4063°N 2.9868°W / 53.4063; -2.9868
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53°24′23″N 2°59′12″W / 53.4063°N 2.9868°W / 53.4063; -2.9868

External image
image icon Statue of Carl Jung, with plaque bearing quotation. Armadillo Tea Rooms, circa 1980's

The Armadillo Tea Rooms was a café in Liverpool that was a significant part of the early '80s music scene.[1] This was helped by their proximity to Mathew Street and Probe Records.[2][3][4][5] The tea rooms was in business from 1978 to the 1990s.[6]

Patrick Clarke, in The Quietus described it as

The Armadillo was the control room, where bands, fanzine writers, artists and organisers would congregate over cheap pots of tea, swapping ideas, theories, proclamations and band members.[7]

They were especially noted for the furry seat covers on the toilets.

The building is now (As of 2025) occupied by Flanagan's Apple Irish Pub.[8]

References

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  1. ^ Reynolds, Simon (2 April 2009). Totally Wired: Postpunk Interviews and Overviews. Faber & Faber. p. 84. ISBN 978-0-571-25229-9.
  2. ^ "Legendary Liverpool Clubs Of Yesteryear". In 1976 Eric's regular Pete Wylie was sitting in a café in Mathew Street, making a mug of tea last all afternoon
  3. ^ "Larks in the Park". Groovin Records.
  4. ^ "Five go mad on Merseyside". Zang TuUmb Tum and all that.
  5. ^ "Beatles in 1983". 1983: In Liverpool, Paul has lunch with his brother Michael at the Armadillo tea rooms.
  6. ^ Molyneux, Jess (5 July 2024). "Lost tea rooms became 'synonymous' with famous Liverpool street". Liverpool Echo. Retrieved 4 February 2025.
  7. ^ Clarke, Patrick (10 April 2018). "Eric's, Probe And The Armadillo: The Story Of Liverpool Music, 1976-1988". The Quietus. Retrieved 4 February 2025.
  8. ^ Flickr Accessed 2014-02-07