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A 5-8 Club Juicy Lucy. The 5-8 Club's signature menu item is its Juicy Lucy cheeseburger which consists of cheese cooked inside a patty of Angus beef. [1] There is contention between the 5-8 Club and Matt's Bar, another Minneapolis eatery located 23 blocks north of the 5-8 Club on Cedar Avenue, about which establishment invented the burger.
Furthermore, the club published a magazine entitled First Avenue In House for a brief time from September 1998 to August 2000. [39] [40] In November 2005, First Avenue released its first compilation CD celebrating 35 years of history. The 16 track CD, Bootlegs Volume 1, is a
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The Minneapolis Club was founded in 1883 by leading Minnesota business and civic leaders, including John Pillsbury and Charles Loring. [1] In its first 25 years, the club changed locations three times. It has been headquartered in its present location, however, since its opening in 1909. Throughout its history, the club has played host to ...
Looking SW on Hennepin, toward 7th St. in 1973. After 1950, as the rest of downtown gentrified, especially as the part of the Gateway District east of Hennepin was demolished and replaced with modern structures and parking lots late in the decade, lower Hennepin Avenue and Washington Avenue South became known as a place for drunks, crime, and prostitution.
It was the first bar ever played by both of the scene's most highly influential bands, Hüsker Dü (on May 13, 1979) [6] and the Replacements (on July 2, 1980). [8] Peter Jesperson, the Replacements' manager and a founder of Twin/Tone Records , who was also a DJ at the Longhorn at that time, [ 9 ] signed the band to Twin/Tone immediately after ...
It was opened by Harry Wyman and his wife Bert in 1939. They eventually built 15 Band Boxes in the chain by 1950. All of the restaurants were in Minneapolis, with the exception of one in Columbia Heights. In 1953, the Wymans sold the chain, and by 1972, this location was the only one that remained. It was purchased in 1998.
The Triple Rock Social Club was a bar, music venue, and restaurant in Minneapolis, Minnesota, United States, co-owned by Gretchen Funk and Erik Funk of the punk band Dillinger Four. [ 1 ] The club is mentioned in the Motion City Soundtrack song "Better Open the Door", as the "T-Rock" in the Doomtree song "Bangarang", and in the Limbeck song ...