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Dallas City Limits was a live music venue and nightclub located at 10530 Spangler Road in Dallas, Texas. It played an important role in the Dallas music scene from the late-1980s until its closure in the mid-1990s. Its demise was due to the growing popularity in grunge music and the decline in metal.
The Longhorn Ballroom in Dallas, Texas has been called, Texas' Most Historic Music Venue [1] and since its inception has had a colorful set of proprietors. Originally built by O.L. Nelms, an eccentric Dallas millionaire, for his close friend, western swing bandleader Bob Wills, the venue opened in 1950 as Bob Wills' Ranch House.
The Station nightclub fire: West Warwick, Rhode Island: United States 2003 100: 230 pyrotechnics acoustic foam Fourth-deadliest club fire in American history República Cromañón nightclub fire: Buenos Aires: Argentina 2004 194: 1432 pyrotechnics plastic net (media sombra), styrofoam and wood decorations, acoustic panels Worst club fire in ...
One note: Dallas nightclub owner Jack Ruby had been visiting in the months before the assassination, Kirkwood said. Ruby, later the killer of accused assassin Lee Harvey Oswald, had been hiring ...
The 1984 Dallas nightclub shooting was a mass shooting that occurred on June 29, 1984, in Dallas, Texas. Abdelkrim Belachheb, a 39-year-old Moroccan national and resident alien , opened fire in Ianni's Restaurant and Club, a bar, killing six and severely injuring one.
Rice initially was being investigated for an incident with the photographer at 609 N. Harwood Street in Dallas, which is the location of Lit Kitchen nightclub. The Dallas Morning News, citing an ...
Trees is an American live music venue opened in 1990 in the Deep Ellum district of downtown Dallas, Texas. The venue has hosted international touring musical acts such as Nirvana, [3] Snoop Dogg, [4] The Flaming Lips, [5] Death Grips, [6] Daughter, [7] The Wailers, [8] Nick Jonas, [9] and Run the Jewels. [10] It has received numerous accolades ...
Dallas Comedy House opened in 2009, closed and reopened in 2019, and closed in 2020. Dallas Comedy Club opened in 2021 in the building formerly occupied by Dallas Comedy House. [13] [14] The area was also host to two local breweries in the 2010s: Deep Ellum Brewing, and BrainDead Brewing (closed in 2021).