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Moles was a live music venue and nightclub in Bath, Somerset with a capacity of 320 people. It was opened by Philip Andrews on New Year's Eve 1977. It was known as a grassroots venue and hosted many music acts before they became household names, such as Oasis, Ed Sheeran, The Killers, Radiohead, The Cure, King Crimson, Eurythmics, and Supergrass.
The BA postcode area, also known as the Bath postcode area, [2] is a group of nineteen postcode districts in South West England, within sixteen post towns.These cover east Somerset (including Bath, Yeovil, Bruton, Castle Cary, Frome, Glastonbury, Radstock, Shepton Mallet, Street, Templecombe, Wells and Wincanton) and west Wiltshire (including Bradford on Avon, Trowbridge, Warminster and ...
The artist and traveller Edward Thomas Daniell was born on 6 June 1804 at Charlotte Street. [9] The late 18th century painter George Morland lived in Charlotte Street. Pierre-Noël Violet, early 19th century miniaturist painter, lived in Charlotte Street. Wadham Wyndham purchased a house in Charlotte Street in 1771 and died there in 1812.
Indeed, one of the side streets off Great Pulteney Street, called Sunderland Street, is the shortest street in the city, with only one address. After 1789, the financial climate did not encourage further building, as the Panic of 1797 , related to a period of deflation between 1793 and 1800, was followed by the Napoleonic Wars and the ...
The music video for the song was released on May 21, 2014, at 9:00 KST, and was uploaded "to celebrate their fifth anniversary of their debut." [ 3 ] The music video combines elements of Roy Lichtenstein 's comic books and Andy Warhol 's "Brillo Boxes" along with splashes of graffiti, emoticons and neon seen throughout the set. 2NE1 teamed up ...
Gay Street in Bath, Somerset, England, links Queen Square to The Circus. It was designed by John Wood, the Elder in 1735 and completed by his son John Wood, the Younger. [5] The land was leased to the elder Wood by Robert Gay, MP for Bath, and the street is named after him. [6] Much of the road has been designated as Grade I listed buildings.
[3] [4] The Orchard Street site became a church and is now a Freemason's Hall. [5] The new theatre was first proposed in 1802 at several sites in Bath until the current site was chosen in 1804; funding was raised by the use of a tontine , an investment plan named after the Neapolitan banker Lorenzo de Tonti , who is credited with inventing it ...
Laura Place in Bathwick, Bath, Somerset, England, consists of four blocks of houses around an irregular quadrangle at the end of Pulteney Bridge. It was built by Thomas Baldwin and John Eveleigh between 1788 and 1794. [1] Numbers 4, 5 and 6 are combined with Numbers 1 to 7 Great Pulteney Street, and others with Henrietta Street.