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Originally a dance hall in the 1940s, the Turf Club has since the 1990s been popular with Twin Cities bands, a sharp contrast to previous years when most local bands only played Minneapolis venues. [1] The club has also become an important venue for national and international touring acts.
Têtes Noires was a rock band from Minneapolis, Minnesota, [1] best known for their "casually mocking" feminist lyrics and for three- and sometimes up to six-part vocal harmonies. [2] Founded by former Miss South Dakota Jennifer Holt, [ 3 ] they gave concerts from 1983 until about 1987, and recorded three albums [ 4 ] which received positive ...
Club 3 Degrees, sometimes shortened to Club 3, is a Christian nightclub located in the warehouse district of Minneapolis, Minnesota. It is believed to be the largest Christian nightclub in the United States today. [1] Club 3 Degrees is a branch of 3 Degrees Ministries.
The site enables you to find more than just reverse lookup names; you can search for addresses, phone numbers and email addresses. BestPeopleFinder gets all its data from official public, state ...
The Minneapolis Greyhound Lines depot was built in the Streamline Moderne style in 1937. The depot restaurant (pictured in 1951) became a coatroom which became the 7th St. Entry. The building opened as a bus depot in 1937, decades after Greyhound Lines was founded in Hibbing, Minnesota .
Palmer's Bar is a dive bar and music venue located in the Cedar-Riverside neighborhood of Minneapolis, Minnesota. Known for its strong drinks, [ 1 ] the bar is a live music venue at night. [ 2 ]
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 ...
On May 16, 2015, a "Longhorn Bar Reunion" was held at First Avenue and 7th St Entry in Minneapolis. Local bands and performers (including X-Boys, Curtiss A, Hypstrz, Flamin'-Oh's, Yipes! and members of The Suburbs and the Suicide Commandoes, billed as "the Sub-Commandoes"), many containing members who played at Jay's Longhorn, paid tribute.