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The Marquee Club was a music venue in London, England, which opened in 1958 with a range of jazz and skiffle acts. It was a small and relatively cheap club, in the heart of London's West End . It was the location of the first live performance by the Rolling Stones on 12 July 1962.
The 1980 Floor Show was a rock musical spectacle featuring English rock musician David Bowie as the protagonist, held at the Marquee Club in Soho, London, on October 18–20, 1973. It was broadcast in the United States by NBC on November 16, 1973, as part of the series The Midnight Special, [1] and presented the last performance of Bowie as his ...
Something Else from the Move was recorded at the Marquee Club in London. [1]By January 1968, the Move had established themselves as one of the most commercially successful groups in the United Kingdom over the past year, scoring three consecutive top-5 singles with "Night of Fear" (1966), I Can Hear the Grass Grow" and Flowers in the Rain" (both 1967), whilst a fourth, "Fire Brigade", had just ...
The Cosmopolitan of Las Vegas[1] (commonly referred to simply as The Cosmopolitan or The Cosmo) [2] is a resort casino and hotel on the Las Vegas Strip in Paradise, Nevada. It is owned by The Blackstone Group, Stonepeak Partners, and Cherng Family Trust and operated by MGM Resorts International. The resort includes a 100,000 sq ft (9,300 m 2 ...
Five Live Yardbirds is the live debut album by the English rock band the Yardbirds. It features the group's interpretations of ten American blues and rhythm and blues songs, including their most popular live number, Howlin' Wolf 's "Smokestack Lightning". The album contains some of the earliest recordings with guitarist Eric Clapton.
Notes. ^ a b The concert on 26 March 1971 at the Marquee Club was the Rolling Stones final concert in England in 1971. It was not officially part of the tour, but the Melody Maker said that it was performed "before a small but elite audience that included Eric Clapton, Jimmy Page, Ric Grech, and Andrew Oldham ".[3]
Live is a live album by Gary Moore, recorded over two nights in 1980 at the Marquee Club in London. For the recording, Moore enlisted former Lone Star frontman, Kenny Driscoll to provide lead vocals (Driscoll's replacement in Lone Star, John Sloman, would later perform with Moore), Andy Pyle of The Kinks to play bass, former Black Oak Arkansas ...
The band was formed in London in 1983 by Gary Twinn, former singer/frontman of the Australian band Supernaut; the drummer Mark Laff, recently from the band Empire, and the former Puncture bass player Steve Counsel. Shortly after its commencement it recruited the lead guitarist Ian McKean. [6][7] Counsel soon quit the new band to join The London ...