
Shed Seven, huts five: Scarborough Open Air Theatre awaits the York band this weekend
SHED Seven are off to the Yorkshire coast on Saturday for their “biggest ever headline show in their home county”, a long-overdue debut at Scarborough Open Air Theatre.
Joining York’s Britpop titans at the UK’s largest purpose-built outdoor concert arena will be special guests Jake Bugg and Cast.
“It’s been a dream of ours for some time to head out to the coast to play Scarborough OAT,” said Sheds frontman Rick Witter when tickets went on sale last October. “It’s a stunning and historic venue…Yorkshire’s very own Hollywood Bowl!
“It’s going to be a huge celebration following the success we had in 2024. Expect big hits and huge singalongs. See you down the front.”
In addition, Shed Seven will play either side of the Pennine divide for Sounds Of The City 2025, first at Castlefield Bowl, Manchester, on July 4, followed by a return to Leeds Millennium Square on July 11, having headlined the Sound Of The City bill there on July 15 2023. Ian Broudie’s Lightning Seeds and The Sherlocks will be on support duty on both nights.
The first question to ask Rick, after the annus mirabilis of the Sheds’ 30th anniversary year, is “what have you been up to since the chart-topping highs of 2024”?
“It’s been a bit of a quiet beginning to the year, but then suddenly it’s June!” he says. “I was best man to Paul [guitarist Paul Banks] at his wedding at the start of March, when he married Mel.

Rick Witter and guitarist Paul Banks performing on the first night of Shed Seven’s 30th anniversary celebrations at Live At York Museum Gardens last summer. Picture: David Harrison
“I sorted out his stag do, and then at the wedding I sang Chasing Rainbows, changing the words for the happy couple.”
Already the Sheds have played their first outdoor show of 2025, supporting Sheffield United fan Paul Heaton at his beloved Bramall Lane homecoming on May 25. “It wasn’t our gig, so we just rocked up and did our thing. Playing Chasing Rainbows to 28,000 was great,” says Rick.
Rehearsals for Scarborough and the summer season ahead took place on Monday and Tuesday before the Sheds headed to Norway to play Bergen. “We’re really looking forward to Scarborough. Yes, it’s not before time, but it’s worked in our favour because we could do the end-of-year 30th anniversary tour and then do the festivals this summer, knowing we needed to take a bit of a break in between.
“It’s nice not to have the pressure of having to sell albums this year. It’s more like a victory lap for us. We have some great ideas for the shows, but I can’t reveal them – though it could be in keeping with things like having the kids’ choir from our old school [Huntington School] singing with us in the Museum Gardens last summer. Something like that.”
The Sheds take pride in providing good value in the bills they have put together for Scarborough, Manchester and Leeds. “We always want to create as much value for money as we can get, while keeping prices as low as possible,” says Rick. “We talk with our booking agents and promoters, and thankfully all the acts we asked were more than happy to join the Shed Seven party.”
Shed Seven will be playing 14 festival and open-air shows this summer, not least a “career-spanning set” at Glastonbury festival on June 27. “It’s our first time there in 30 years, when we played possibly the NME stage. There was a huge crowd for us back then, and this time we’ll be on the Woodsies stage, which used to be the John Peel Stage, playing mid-afternoon on the Friday [5.15pm to 6pm to be precise].
“It’s going to be in a tent, which is nice because you know the audience are there for you, and the lighting show can be better.”
Reflecting on the maximum highs of 2024 – the brace of number one albums, the Museum Gardens concerts and 30th anniversary tour – Rick says: “What a year! At the end of the day, you never know what’s coming next with what you do, but we could sense something building over the last few years, and then everything seemed to align for us last year.

Shed Seven’s poster for Live Summer 2025 concerts at Scarborough Open Air Theatre, Manchester Castlefield Bowl and Leeds Millennium Square
“How incredible for it to happen in our 30th year, but the fact we are self-managed now and in control gave us our buzz, and we became the biggest we’d been since the mid-1990s.
“It got to the point in November [when on tour], where I was getting up, cleaning my teeth, looking in the mirror and thinking. ‘oh no, not you again’! But I think we’re very savvy as a band at knowing when to push it and when to step back.”
Rick continues: “I’m very proud that we’re among only 20 acts since 1953 to have two UK number one albums in one year – and no other indie guitar band has done it. It’s an exclusive club!”
Looking ahead, “in the down time, we’ll start writing for the next album for a couple of years’ time, with plans for a Shedcember tour at the back end of 2026”.
Rick finished this interview with a recollection from 1995. “We had nowhere to rehearse in York at the time, but Tom [Gladwin], the bass player, knew the owner of the Cockerill potato plant, on Hull Road, where there was a disused office just collecting dust.
“His son said, ‘if you want to go and write and record there’…and that’s where we put together the ideas for A Maximum High. Then B&Q bought the site, and where they now sell sheds at B&Q is the exact spot where Cockerills had that disused office. It’s like it was meant to be!”
Shed Seven play Scarborough Open Air Theatre, supported by Jake Bugg and Cast, June 14; gates open at 6pm. Box office: scarboroughopenairtheatre.com/shedseven.