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Waterloo Records is an independent music and video retailer in Austin, Texas, which has been an integral part of Austin's music scene since 1982. The store provides a large selection of new and used CDs, vinyl records, DVDs, Blu-rays, turntables, music-related magazines, t-shirts, and other memorabilia. Waterloo is known for their knowledgeable ...
The greatest concentrations of music venues in Austin are around 6th Street, Central East Austin, the Red River Cultural District, the Warehouse District, the University of Texas, South Congress, and South Lamar. "Austin music" in its modern form emerged in 1972 when "a new form of country music exploded on the scene that turned its back on ...
Before Austin was trumpeting itself as the Live Music Capital of America, it hosted a number of important music scenes, many of which only later had relevance out of town. In the early '70s, during the heyday of what was then called 'progressive country', the place you bought the records of the artists you heard in the clubs was Inner Sanctum ...
Mar. 5—From 9 to 81, Barry Rush has experienced all the joys that music has to offer If you're familiar with the music scene here in Austin, or really anywhere, there is a reasonable chance you ...
Austin Area Arts, in partnership with South Central Athlete and Dusty's Bar and Lounge will be presenting the Mower County Grown Music Festival. Doors open at 2:30 p.m. on April 27.
South Congress (abbreviated SoCo) is a neighborhood located on South Congress Avenue in Austin, Texas, United States.It is also a nationally known shopping and cultural district known for its many eclectic small retailers, restaurants, music and art venues and, more recently, food trucks.
Deborah Sengupta Stith, former Statesman music beat reporter, now Austin360 editor: Michael Corcoran, arguably the greatest chronicler of the Austin music scene, has died. Corky was a gleeful ...
It was born from a community art collective known as the South Austin Museum of Popular Culture which had coalesced in 2004 around the private files of Henry Gonzalez. [2] The collections expanded to include other live music venues of the 1970s including Threadgills, the Vulcan Gas Company, the Austin Opry House, and Antone's.