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Bay Area punk and New Wave bands performed there, and it was an important touring stop for bands from beyond the San Francisco Bay Area. Among the local bands that performed regularly at the Mabuhay Gardens were Avengers , Dead Kennedys , The Contractions , The Nuns , Crime , Dils , Fear , Pearl Harbor and the Explosions , the Tubes and Wall of ...
San Francisco Bay Area portal Official "Mountain Play" website – including schedules and ticket sales 37°54′46″N 122°36′32″W / 37.91278°N 122.60889°W / 37.91278; -122
San Bernardino: 65,000 unknown Orange Pavilion: 3,600 April 14, 2023 [10] Yaamava’ Theater 3,000 [11] 1995 Coussoulis Arena: 5,000 2005 House of Blues: San Diego: 1,100 2009 Conrad Prebys Music Center: 380 1924; reopened 2008 Balboa Theatre: 1,339 1980s Humphrey's Concerts by the Bay 1,400 [12] 1965 San Diego Civic Theatre: 2,967 1989 The ...
Although 20,000 tickets were reported to have been sold for the event, as many as 40,000 people may have actually attended the two-day concert, which was the first of a series of San Francisco–area cultural events known as the Summer of Love. [1]
San Francisco: Dreamland Red Rockers: August 19, 1981 [119] Petaluma: Phoenix Theatre The Victims Jo Allen and the Shapes August 20, 1981 Santa Cruz: Santa Cruz Civic Auditorium: The Mutants The Batteries August 21, 1981 San Francisco Warfield Theatre — August 27, 1981 East Islip: Club 2001 August 29, 1981 New York City Pier 84 September 3 ...
The auditorium hosted the 1920 Democratic National Convention, the San Francisco Opera from 1923 to 1932 and again for the 1996 season, [2] and the National AAU boxing trials in 1948. It was the home of the San Francisco Warriors of the National Basketball Association from 1964 to 1967.
Tour dates. List of 1974 concerts Date [7] ... Painter's Mill Music Fair: Aerosmith Redbone March 25, 1974 ... San Francisco: Winterland Ballroom: June 3, 1974:
The Warfield Theatre, colloquially called The Warfield, is a 2,300-seat music venue located in the Theatre District in downtown San Francisco, California, United States. It was built as a vaudeville theater and opened as the Loews Warfield on May 13, 1922. [1]