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The pub is served by Transport for London buses 22, 265, 378, 485 which stop on the Lower Richmond road. Putney Bridge tube station (District line) is a 12 minute walk over Putney Bridge and Putney railway station (Southwestern Railway) is a 12 minute walk up Putney High Street.
Nambucca is a live music venue in Holloway Road in London. Since being rebuilt following a fire it now houses two distinct areas in a big open plan venue - a front bar area and a rear dancefloor and gig area. It is popular with up-and-coming bands and hosts music and entertainment events on a nightly basis.
Released in 1970, Live at Leeds is the most famous live album performed by The Who. The album was recorded from a concert held at the University of Leeds as part of a two leg gig. The preferred recording was from the second night at Hull, however the bass line failed to record so the Leeds recording was used instead.
The Windmill is a pub and live music venue in Brixton, London, England, with a reputation for championing new music. [1] [2] It was voted the third best music venue in London, in a 2012 poll in Time Out magazine, [2] and #7 by The Guardian in 2008, [3] and has been described as "one of the top-10 music venues in the U.K.".
The Guardian named The Cobblestone as "Ireland's most famous traditional music pub" in 2021. [1] Condé Nast Traveller described its sessions as "some of the best live traditional music you’ll hear anywhere". [6] In 2023, the pub was the subject of an RTÉ documentary, Athbhaile. [2]
There is a live rock and hip hop music scene, which reached its height in the Britpop years, around 1997, due to its close proximity to Sheffield and Manchester. The 1980s saw the rise of Saxon (metal band), Danse Society (Goth) and Party Day (Indie-rock). Both Alex Turner and Matt Helders, of the Arctic Monkeys, studied music at Barnsley College.
The Bull's Head, also known as The Bull, is a pub in Barnes in the London Borough of Richmond upon Thames, England. It hosts live music in an attached music room that has a seated capacity of 70 people. [1] [2] [3] Overlooking the river Thames, it was one of the first and most important jazz venues in Britain.
When The Tally Ho pub in Kentish Town decided to switch from showcasing rock music to Irish music, Hope and Anchor became the venue to go to in north London.The nights grew and developed under the stewardship of managers Fred Grainger and Dave Robinson, both of whom later moved on to other things (Grainger to open a nightclub in Brighton, Robinson to co-found independent record label Stiff ...