The Blue Note (Columbia, Missouri)
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The Blue Note facing Ninth Street
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Location | 17 North 9th Street Columbia, Missouri 65201 United States |
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Owner | Richard King |
Type | Music venue |
Capacity | 835 |
Opened | 1980 |
Website | |
http://www.thebluenote.com/ |
The Blue Note is a music venue in Columbia, Missouri. It was established in 1980 by Richard King[1] and Phil Costello. The original Blue Note was located at 912 Business Loop 70 East and moved to its Ninth Street location (a restored vaudeville theater[2]) in the early 1990s. It is famous for the legal case Bensusan Restaurant Corp. v. King over naming use on the internet. It has hosted numerous musical acts, including Phish, Widespread Panic, REM, Husker Du (their last show), Uncle Tupelo, Meat Puppets, Chuck Berry, The Replacements, The Minutemen, Dinosaur Jr., Primus, Black Flag, Red Hot Chili Peppers, Violent Femmes, Soul Asylum, Shinedown, Dave Matthews Band, Johnny Cash, Willie Nelson, Young the Giant, and Arctic Monkeys,[3] and holds a free five-part concert series every summer called "Ninth Street Summerfest".[4] The building was formerly a vaudeville theater and is a contributing property to the North Ninth Street Historic District.
Rose Music Hall (formerly Mojo's)
Rose Music Hall, often referred to as "The Blue Note's little sister",[5][6] is a smaller music venue (capacity 200) also owned by Richard King,[1] which usually books smaller-name bands.
Forrest Rose Park is located adjacent to Rose Music Hall and is maintained by Rose Music Hall's/Blue Note staff. The park began hosting outdoor performances in 2008. Past performers have included Carolina Chocolate Drops, Big Smith, Local Natives, Portugal. The Man and Cave (band).
References
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to The Blue Note (Missouri). |
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