Music venues The Armadillo World Headquarters (usually called simply The Armadillo) was the premiere music hall and entertainment center in Austin, Texas between 1970 and 1980. ...more on Wikipedia about "Armadillo World Headquarters"
Blå (English: "Blue") is a jazz club in Oslo, Norway. ...more on Wikipedia about "Blå"
Concordia Hall is a music venue in Baltimore, Maryland. It was founded in 1867 by Germans from the largest immigrant community in that city. ...more on Wikipedia about "Concordia Hall"
The Cornelia Street Cafe, in New York's Greenwich Village, was home to a Monday night workshop for songwriters in the early 1980s. The one rule for the songwriters was that the song had to have been written -- or at least heavily worked on -- within the past week. It was a venue in which songwriters such as Suzanne Vega perfected their craft, sometimes receiving private comments from other songwriters but often just having a chance to watch reactions to the song in a supportive environment. ...more on Wikipedia about "Cornelia Street Cafe"
The Georgia Theatre is a prominent music venue in Athens, Georgia, located in an old cinema. Many prominents acts from the early music of Athens, Georgia performed at the Georgia Theatre. ...more on Wikipedia about "Georgia Theatre"
Glass Bowl is a stadium in Toledo, Ohio. It is primarily used for American football, and is the home field of the University of Toledo Rockets. It was built in 1937 at a cost of only $335,000 as a Works Progress Administration project. Originally it seated 18,500 fans, but following a major renovation in 1990, now seats 26,248. As part of the 1990 renovations, which cost $18 million, in addition to an expansion to the seating area, a three-story press box, which also includes 40 luxury suites, a 400-seat Stadium Club and sports information offices, and the Larimer Athletic Complex were built. ...more on Wikipedia about "Glass Bowl"
The Hallenstadion is a multifunctional sports arena in the Swiss municipality of Oerlikon near Zurich. It had been opened on July 18, 1939, and it's being renovated since 2004. ...more on Wikipedia about "Hallenstadion"
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The Joseph Meyerhoff Symphony Hall is a music venue in Baltimore, Maryland. It is home to the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra. Joseph Meyerhoff was a Ukrainian immigrant who became president of the Baltimore Symphony in 1865. ...more on Wikipedia about "Joseph Meyerhoff Symphony Hall"
Liberty Lunch was a live-music venue in Austin, Texas. It began in the 1940s as an eatery and, over the years, evolved into a live-music venue. During its heyday in the late- 1970s and 1980s, it featured all kinds of music, including reggae and ska, punk, indie, country and rock. ...more on Wikipedia about "Liberty Lunch"
Mabuhay Gardens was originally a Filipino restaurant and club owned by Ness Aquino that featured many Filipino Superstars including Miss Amapola, the singing sensation who later co-hosted with Ness Aquino on her weekly "Amapola Presents Show" on KEMO-TV Channel 20. Located at 448 Broadway in the North Beach neighborhood of San Francisco, an area famous for its strip clubs. Rock promotor Dirk Dirksen rented out the club and began booking punk bands there, and the venue soon became one of the centers of punk rock in San Francisco in the late 1970s and early 1980s. Numerous bands, including the Dictators (1976), Dead Kennedys, Metallica, Romeo Void, Black Flag, The Nuns, The Avengers, The Damned, DEVO, Iggy Pop, The Ramones, Hüsker Dü, D.O.A., The Screamers — virtually every band from the early days of punk would play there. According to the intro crawl of the Dead Kennedys' Live at DMPO's on Broadway video, Whoopie Goldberg also made early appearances at the venue. Dirk Dirsen who wrote and directed "Amapola Presents Show" featured several of the bands in tandem with Fab Mab. ...more on Wikipedia about "Mabuhay Gardens"
A music venue is any location of a music performance. In the music industry, it is common to refer to concert sites as venues, especially among touring acts. ...more on Wikipedia about "Music venue"
Off the Alley was a starting point for many punk rock bands throughout the 1980s and 1990s located on Chicago's southside at 18061 South Dixie Hwy, Homewood, Illinois behind a local record shop called Record Swap. The small venue was visited by such music industry legends as Chuck Paugh, and punk bands such as Smoking Popes and Screaching Weasle regularly played at this location. The venue was also a dance club playing music such as 'New Order', 'Echo and the Bunnymen', 'Skinny Puppy" and the like. ...more on Wikipedia about "Off the Alley"
The Palace of Music (Zenepalota) is a building in Bartók square, Miskolc, Hungary. It is the building of the Béla Bartók Secondary School and the Béla Bartók Music Institute (a faculty of the University of Miskolc.) The Palace was designed by Gyula Waelder in Neobaroque style and was built between 1926 and 1927. The construction was financed from USA loans, just like that of the Hotel Palace in Lillafüred and the Market Hall on Búza tér. ...more on Wikipedia about "Palace of Music (Miskolc)"
What began as a deaf person's club on Valencia Street in San Francisco in the 1930's, the San Francisco Club for the Deaf became a notable music venue located in the same building and remained open for an 18 month period. It closed with a party hosted by the artist and filmmaker Bruce Conner. Robert Hanrahan, manager of the Offs, discovered the San Francisco Club for the Deaf and was able to rent it on a nightly basis. The first show as the Deaf Club on December 9th 1978 featured the Offs, Mutants and On The Rag. Over 100 great bands from northern California that included the Zeros, Crime, Dils, Flipper and from southern California, the Bags, Alleycats, Germs, X and Dinettes would play this small underground club that was in a loft like space at the top of two long flights of stairs. The house DJs were Enrico Chandoha who worked on the editorial staff of the early Thrasher Magazine; Jack Fan an Offs road manager and chef at the Zuni; Johnnie Walker the BBC celebrity and Robert Hanrahan. Given the unique nature of the venue and its location in the Mission District near 16th Street and the Roxie Theater it was enthusiastically supported by the punk and arts community, visited by film greats like John Waters and occasionally challenged by the officials of the San Francisco noise abatement patrol, the police, fire department, health department and the alcohol and beverage control until it closed. ...more on Wikipedia about "San Francisco Club for the Deaf" shortopedia moments. shortopedia
The Speakeasy Club is a central London late-night haunt for the music industry during the late 1960s and 1970s. Known in the business as "The Speak", it included a restaurant and music room. ...more on Wikipedia about "Speakeasy Club"
The Star-Club was a music club in Hamburg, Germany that opened April 13, 1962 and was initially operated by Manfred Weissleder und Horst Fascher. In the sixties, many of the giants of rock music played at the club. The club closed on December 31, 1969, and the building it occupied was destroyed by a fire in 1987. The address in Hamburg area St. Pauli was: Große Freiheit 39 or Great Freedom 39; Große Freiheit is a side street of the Reeperbahn. ...more on Wikipedia about "Star-Club"
The John G. Shedd Institute for the Arts is a performing arts company, cultural arts center, and community music school in Eugene, Oregon. Located in downtown Eugene, The Shedd Institute has 3 performance venues, various community meeting rooms, and extensive music education facilities. It presents annually an array of culturally-diverse festivals, concert series and educational programs that focus on, but are not limited to, American music in all of its forms and variations. ...more on Wikipedia about "The John G. Shedd Institute for the Arts"
The Masque was a small punk rock club in central Hollywood ...more on Wikipedia about "The Masque"
The Twisted Wheel Club is a club in Manchester, UK. ...more on Wikipedia about "Twisted Wheel Club"
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