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Ground Zero Neon Sign/Logo Exterior of Ground Zero Blues Club, 2019. Ground Zero is a blues club in Clarksdale, Mississippi, US that is co-owned by Morgan Freeman, Memphis entertainment executive Howard Stovall, and businessman Eric Meier. [1] Attorney Bill Luckett was also co-owner until his death in 2021. [2] It got its name from Clarksdale ...
From May 2001 till his death, Luckett also co-owned with business partner Morgan Freeman the Ground Zero Blues Club. [3] [12] He also co-owned the Madidi Restaurant with Freeman from 2001 to 2012. [13] [14] He was also a member of the NAACP. [1] Luckett was born in Fort Worth, Texas and grew up in Clarksdale, Mississippi. [15]
In June 2017, he played at the Jackson, Mississippi Underground 119 blues club which re-opened in spring 2017, after being closed since August, 2015. The club's co-owner Michael Rejebian said the two kinds of bands you have to prepare for were show bands and party bands but with Kingfish, he was sort of the best of both worlds. [ 18 ]
Morgan Freeman rang in the new year with Al Green.. The Oscar winner spent Tuesday, Dec. 31 at his Mississippi bar Ground Zero Blues Club, where he got up on stage with the Rock & Roll Hall of ...
Ground Zero Blues Club, Memphis, Tennessee [21] Five of Allen's songs were listed on the Roots Music Report's Weekly Top 50 Mississippi Song Chart for the week of July 20, 2014. [22] Allen's 2018 live album, Dexter Allen: Live From Ground Zero Blues Club, was filmed in HD video - including club owner Morgan Freeman introducing him to kick off ...
Ground zero describes the point on the Earth's surface (its hypocenter) closest to a nuclear detonation. In the case of an explosion above the ground, ground zero refers to the point on the ground directly below the nuclear detonation. Ground zero may also refer to: The World Trade Center site in New York City, after the September 11 attacks
Riverside Hotel Blues Trail marker. Riverside Hotel was a hotel in Clarksdale, Mississippi, in operation since 1944.The fourth marker location on the Mississippi Blues Trail, famed for providing lodging for such blues artists as Sonny Boy Williamson II, Ike Turner, and Robert Nighthawk, it was previously the G.T. Thomas Hospital, in which Bessie Smith died in 1937.
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