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Mississippi Nights was a music club in St. Louis, Missouri. It opened on October 11, 1976 [ 2 ] and was located at 914 N 1st Street, on the western bank of the Mississippi River , four blocks north of the Gateway Arch in Laclede's Landing .
Mississippi Nights: The Symptoms August 1, 1978 Champaign Red Lion Inn — August 2, 1978 Moraine: The Alley August 5, 1978 Asbury Park: Asbury Park Convention Hall: Supporting act for: Patti Smith: August 11, 1978 New York City Hurrah: The Mumps August 12, 1978 August 13, 1978 August 18, 1978 Dover: Elks Lodge The Cramps: August 19, 1978 ...
Tensions mounted between singers Jay Farrar and Jeff Tweedy, and Uncle Tupelo played its last concert on May 1, 1994, at Mississippi Nights in St. Louis, Missouri. [4] [5] Only days after the breakup, Tweedy decided to form a new group. He was able to retain the lineup of Uncle Tupelo sans Farrar, and rechristened the band Wilco.
The exhibit also featured the city’s premier music venue, Mississippi Nights (now defunct and ready to be revived), and how that acted as a place where the city could come together in the name ...
Mississippi Nights: Urge Overkill: October 17, 1991 Lawrence: Kansas Union Ballroom Paw & Urge Overkill: October 19, 1991 Dallas: Trees Club: Sister Double Happiness & Thinking Fellers Union Local 282: 1,000/1,000 [28] October 20, 1991 Houston: The Vatican Sister Double Happiness: October 21, 1991 Austin: Waterloo Records: Liberty Lunch ...
Mississippi Nights April 18, 1999 Memphis New Daisy Theatre: April 19, 1999 Knoxville Moose's Music Hall April 21, 1999 Chicago House of Blues April 22, 1999 Bloomington: Pic-a-Pac Theater Staind, Cypress Hill: April 23, 1999 Grand Rapids: The Intersection Staind: April 24, 1999 Toledo Main Event April 25, 1999 Cincinnati Bogart's April 27, 1999
The Stones Hackney Diamonds Tour '24 plays MetLife in East Rutherford on Thursday, May 23, and Sunday, May 26.
The setlist always contains selections from albums such as The Wall, The Dark Side of the Moon, Wish You Were Here and Animals, but also can include tracks such as "Free Four", "Fearless" and "Set the Controls for the Heart of the Sun". The band is the subject of the documentary El Monstero: The Movie, directed by St. Louis native Mark Halski. [5]