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9:30 Club

38°55′5″N 77°1′26″W / 38.91806°N 77.02389°W / 38.91806; -77.02389

9:30 Club
The 9:30
Belle and Sebastian performing at the 9:30 Club in March 2006
Former namesAtlantis (1977–1979)
Nightclub 9:30 (1980–95)
Address815 V St NW
Washington, D.C. 20001-3020
LocationU Street Corridor
Public transitWashington Metro
at U Street
OwnerJon Bowers and Dody DiSanto (1980–86)
Richard Heinecke and Seth Hurwitz (since 1986)
Seating typeStanding room / bar and balcony seating[2]
Capacity1,200[1]
OpenedMay 31, 1980 (May 31, 1980)
Website
Venue Website

The 9:30 Club (originally named Nightclub 9:30, also known simply as the 9:30) is a nightclub and concert venue in Washington, D.C. In 2018, the 9:30 Club was named one of the 10 best live music venues in America by Rolling Stone, and in 2019 the club was named "Venue of the Decade" by VenuesNow.[3][4]

The club was originally housed in the ground floor rear room of the Atlantic Building at 930 F Street NW, in the city's downtown area, where it opened on May 31, 1980,[5] with a legal standing capacity of 199.[2][6] In 1996, the club was moved to a roomier space: its current location at 815 V Street NW,[2][5] where it anchors the eastern end of the U Street Corridor.

The 9:30 Club's name was derived from its original street address, which was also the reason to set the venue's original opening time of 9:30 p.m.[7] Early advertising on D.C.'s WHFS radio featured the slogan "9:30 – a Place and Time!"

The club has a distinctive wheeled stage mounted on rails, which can be moved back and forth as needed. This way, the place can feel as packed with 500 people in attendance as it would during a sold-out, full capacity show.[8][9]

Fall Out Boy's Patrick Stump once said of the 9:30, "it's got so much character, you wonder if the locals know how lucky they are."[10]

History edit

Nightclub 9:30 edit

 
Bad Brains at Nightclub 9:30 in 1983
 
The entrance to the original Nightclub 9:30 in the Atlantic Building in 1990
 
The interior of the original Nightclub 9:30 in 1990 with the stage visible in the background

Nightclub 9:30 was founded by artist and dancer Dody DiSanto and her husband, Jon Bowers, a local real estate developer and music enthusiast who had just purchased the Atlantic Building in 1979.[2][5][11][12] The Atlantic Building was full of artists even before it became the 9:30 club.[13] The venue hosted its first show on May 31, 1980,[5] featuring New York-based jazz-punk outfit the Lounge Lizards as headliners, and local new wave band Tiny Desk Unit as the opening act.[2][5][14] New York's The Fleshtones were the first band ever to be booked at the club.[15]

Since its origins, Nightclub 9:30, which allowed fans as young as sixteen to enter, was known as a progressive venue noted for its talent in discovering up-and-coming acts. During the early 1980s, it was the home for alternative music in D.C.,[2] just as the genre was beginning to blossom.[5] By that point, the club was based around local bands, mainly from the punk, hardcore, and go-go scenes;[5] D.C.-area acts such as Minor Threat (played there in '83), Fugazi (also played there in '94), Government Issue, Iron Cross, the Slickee Boys, Urban Verbs, Chuck Brown ("The Godfather of Go-Go") in '05, Maiesha and the Hip Huggers featuring E.U., Root Boy Slim and the Sex Change Band, Rites of Spring played in 1985,[16] and Dain Bramage, whose teenage drummer, Dave Grohl, went on to become part of Nirvana and to found the Foo Fighters.[2] (The Foo Fighters also played there in '99.)[17] James Blood Ulmer played there in 1982.[18]

However, in a very short time, the venue also became a regular stopping point for punk and new wave bands touring the East Coast.[19] Some of the most notable performers in the early days of Nightclub 9:30 were Black Flag, the Bad Brains from D.C. (also played there in '92), the Red Hot Chili Peppers, the Psychedelic Furs, Einstürzende Neubauten, the Ramones, X, Blue Angel (with lead singer Cyndi Lauper), the Bangles, R.E.M., Hüsker Dü, Erasure, Richard Hell and the Voidoids, the Violent Femmes, the Butthole Surfers, That Petrol Emotion, the Replacements, Marti Jones, Marshall Crenshaw, Mod Fun, The Dancing Cigarettes, Nash the Slash, the Go-Go's, and BETTY, whose bassist and co-vocalist, Alyson Palmer, tended bar in the club at the time.

On May 21, 1981, Washington music programmer and writer Tom Terrell was instrumental in masterminding the U.S. premiere of reggae band Steel Pulse on the night of Bob Marley's funeral, which was broadcast live worldwide from Nightclub 9:30.

In 1986, after six years of operating the club, Bowers and DiSanto sold it to Seth Hurwitz and Richard Heinecke of It's My Party (I.M.P.), the Maryland-based concert promotion company they co-own.[2][8][11][20]

Over the following years, as the club's prominence and lineup were growing, the need for a bigger space was becoming increasingly evident. In preparation for the move, the owners purchased and extensively renovated the former WUST Radio Music Hall at 815 V Street.

The old Nightclub 9:30 closed its doors on December 31, 1995.[2] The club's final shows at the original location were memorialized on a two-CD set released in 1997 and entitled 9:30 Live – A Time, A Place, A Scene. This live CD, recorded between December 28, 1995, and January 1, 1996, includes local music from the Urban Verbs, Tiny Desk Unit, Mother May I, The Insect Surfers, Tru Fax and the Insaniacs, and Black Market Baby.

In 2023, Hurwitz opened the Atlantis, a small club designed to evoke the original Nightclub 9:30.[21] In the opening ceremony, the Mayor of D.C. designated May 30th as "9:30 Club Day".[22]

9:30 Club edit

 
9:30 Club in 2015

Before the reopening, the club owners organized a "christening" show for media and friends featuring the Fleshtones and Too Much Joy. On January 5, 1996, the new 9:30 Club opened to the public with a show that included the Smashing Pumpkins.[11]

NPR's online music show All Songs Considered broadcast some concerts at the venue. There is an archive of these shows.

Washington, D.C.-based acts that have played at the 9:30 Club include Good Charlotte and Vertical Horizon in 2004, Joan Jett (who briefly lived in Maryland) in 2006, Mýa in 2007, Wale in 2010, and SHAED in 2019.[23]

Significant moments edit

 
View from the balcony during Massive Attack's show on September 29, 2006
 
Johnny Marr performing with The Cribs at the 9:30 Club in 2010

Popular local band Emmet Swimming played one of the first shows at the new 9:30 on a snowy night and recorded part of their live concert CD Earplugs 50¢ at the venue.[24]

Bob Dylan played shows on December 4[25] and 5,[26] 1997, when he was in Washington, D.C., to receive the Kennedy Center Honors. Dylan returned for an unannounced show on April 2, 2004,[27][28] before scheduled dates at the Bender Arena and the Warner Theatre.

On June 12, 1998, the Red Hot Chili Peppers performed a surprise eleven-song set at the club. Money Mark and the Propellerheads were the opening acts. The show, which was the band's first at the new venue (they had previously performed at the old 9:30 Club five times from 1985 to 1987), was their first public performance since reuniting with guitarist John Frusciante, who had quit the band in 1992; although the band had performed a short in-studio acoustic set of mostly cover songs a week early for a radio show in Los Angeles. The 9:30 Club show was seen as a warm-up for their performance the next day at the Tibetan Freedom Concert, which was held at the RFK Stadium in Washington, D.C.; when bad weather cancelled their set at the concert, Pearl Jam shortened their own set so the Chili Peppers could perform a few songs.[29][30]

O.A.R., whose members grew up in nearby Rockville, Maryland, recorded the live album Any Time Now at the 9:30 Club on November 23 and 24, 2001.[31] The venue also hosted the band's first four shows on their 2012 Extended Stay tour.

Gorillaz performed their second concert in the U.S. at The 9:30 Club on February 26, 2002; their first U.S. show was in Boston at Avalon Ballroom on February 25, 2002.

On June 2 and 3, 2002, Arizona band Jimmy Eat World recorded their live DVD Believe in What You Want at the nightclub, following the release of their album Bleed American. The video was released on November 26, 2002.

In 2003, local band the Pietasters released their first live video DVD, Live at The 9:30 Club.

The Beastie Boys performed at the club on June 17, 2004, after a five-year hiatus. This was a radio event sponsored by WHFS 99.1 FM, which gave away all the tickets for the event to listeners. A thunderstorm delayed the band's travel from New York City. About 8:30 p.m., Radio DJs the Junkies and Tim Virgin read a statement from the Beastie Boys explaining the situation, noting that they were on the train, and saying the show would go on at about 11:15 p.m. The crowd was disappointed, but the club relaxed its re-admittance policy and allowed everyone to leave and have dinner if they so desired. To further ease crowd tensions, the Beastie Boys' management had pizzas delivered to the club for fans.[32] Mix Master Mike took the stage at 11:13 p.m. to warm up the crowd. The Beastie Boys came out minutes later on stage in front of a packed house. Posters of this late 9:30 Club performance are in the Beastie Boys' video "Triple Trouble", pasted on the walls of the streets the group walk through at 2:13.

The Smashing Pumpkins celebrated the release of Zeitgeist, their first album in seven years, at the 9:30 Club on July 10, 2007. The event was depicted in the band's 2008 DVD documentary, If All Goes Wrong.

Radiohead played a secret show at the venue on June 13, 1998, in which, Michael Stipe of R.E.M. fame sang with the band on one of their hits. They decided to play this show because their appearance at the Tibetan Freedom Concert held at the RFK Stadium was delayed to the next day due to bad weather. Additionally, the Beastie Boys, Ed Kowalczyk of Live, Brad Pitt, Jennifer Aniston, Dave Grohl of The Foo Fighters attended as part of the crowd.

Bob Mould performed at the club on October 7, 2005, and released a subsequent DVD of the concert called Circle of Friends.

On November 24, 2007, Hawthorne Heights guitarist and screamer Casey Calvert was found dead of a drug overdose on their tour bus, which was parked outside the club.

In September 2009, the newly reunited Alice in Chains kicked off their U.S. tour at the 9:30 Club with new singer William DuVall.[33]

On December 28, 2009, Clutch recorded their DVD Live at the 9:30, performing their self-titled album, Clutch, in its entirety.

In May 2010, the legendary reggae band Steel Pulse performed their charity song "Hold On for Haiti" for the first time. All proceeds from the song go to nonprofit organizations Solar Electric Light Fund and Partners In Health, to solar electrify health clinics in Haiti.[34]

On May 31, 2010, the 9:30 Club celebrated its 30th anniversary with a lineup stretching its history, including Tiny Desk Unit, The Fleshtones, Tommy Keene, The Slickee Boys, The Psychedelic Furs, Marti Jones and Don Dixon, Clutch, Trouble Funk, The Evens, Justin Jones, The Pietasters, Pete Stahl, Ted Leo, Bob Mould, and Dave Grohl. The event was hosted by Henry Rollins.[35]

In June 2010, Courtney Love and the newly reformed Hole performed a disastrous set described by The Washington Post as a three-hour epic train wreck. A barely coherent Love stumbled, complained and stripped through an entire set composed mostly of incomplete versions of the band's songs. Most members of the audience left before the set ended.

On July 30, 2010, house music producer deadmau5 collapsed on stage in the middle of a set and was rushed to the hospital. He had been suffering from exhaustion and vomiting. This collapse led to the cancellation of the nine shows which followed the event.

On May 12, 2011, Adele performed at the venue as part of her Adele Live tour. She sold out the venue in less than two minutes, and the show grossed $45,000. Back in 2009, she also performed her debut concert tour An Evening with Adele on January 17.

On February 24, 2012, the Soul Rebels Brass Band were the subject of an NPR national broadcast of their show with Galactic live from the 9:30 Club. The broadcast was syndicated on NPR and through other affiliates across the United States, as well as webcast on NPR.org.[36]

On September 25, 2012, Adam Lambert headlined a benefit hosted by Marylanders for Marriage Equality, a group working to garner support for the state's ballot-proposition to legislate marriage equality.[37]

On June 12, 2013, Animal Collective performed a set of songs previously released on their LPs and EPs. The show was documented on the album Live at 9:30.

In 2013, hardcore punk supergroup, Off!, released the limited edition vinyl album, Live at 9:30 Club, which featured their performance from June 25, 2011.

The Pixies performed a surprise show on May 31, 2015, after their appearance at the Sweetlife Festival the day before.

In January 2016, 9:30 celebrated its 35th birthday by opening its doors for an interactive exhibition detailing the club's vast history, the "9:30 World's Fair". This exhibition highlighted the pieces of the old 930 F St. location that made the trip to 815 V St., while taking dedicated fans through a tour of the venue like it had never been seen before, including a look inside the dressing rooms and a peek at the hair dryer purchased specifically for James Brown.[38]

On January 27, 2016, Jack's Mannequin returned to the road to honor the 10-year anniversary of the album Everything in Transit. Playing just weeks after the death of David Bowie, Andrew McMahon also performed an acoustic rendition of “Life on Mars”.[39]

In March 2016, At the Drive-In's reunion tour was cut short after night one of two at the club, when singer Cedric Bixler lost his voice due to illness.[40]

On June 6, 2016, Tom Petty's pre-Heartbreakers band Mudcrutch performed at the club on its very first tour despite being founded three decades earlier. While not performing any Heartbreaker's hits, their set included the traditional song "Shady Grove" (perhaps as a nod to the DC Metro Station), and a cover of Bob Dylan's "Knockin' on Heaven's Door".[41]

On August 24, 2016, ZZ Top performed for a sold-out audience, the "Surprise! At the Club!" performance having only been announced two weeks prior. Jonny "2 Bags" Wickersham of Social Distortion opened the show, which saw ZZ performing all of their classic hits before concluding with a cover of Elvis Presley's "Jailhouse Rock".[42]

In support of Wild World, Bastille sold out the club in minutes for their show on October 2, 2016, just months before playing EagleBank Arena.[43]

The very next day, October 3, 2016, was another "Surprise! At the Club!": Green Day, in preparation for their international Revolution Radio Tour. An inside look at what the show meant to some of their fans can be seen in Episode 12 of Live at 9:30.[44]

December 14, 2016 saw Jimmy Eat World return to 9:30 for another "Surprise! At the Club!"[45]

On January 14, 2017, 9:30 opened its doors to celebrate the life and music of Urban Verbs' guitarist and NPR music librarian Robert Goldstein, with tribute performances including The Slickee Boys and Martha Hull & The 7 Door Sedan.[46]

Later that month, the 9:30 Club partnered with Planned Parenthood for two shows. The first, a free event titled "Show Up!", took place on January 19, 2017 featuring Common and The National. The second was the official 2017 Women's March after-party/benefit show hosted by Funny or Die on January 21, 2017, titled "Laugh, Dance... then Get to Work!" Special guests at this performance included Senators Al Franken and Cory Booker, Sleater-Kinney, Sara Bareilles, Sam Harris of X Ambassadors, Ted Leo, Dirty Projectors' David Longstreth, The National, Ani DiFranco, Samantha Ronson, Macklemore, Tig Notaro, Janeane Garofalo, Lizzy Caplan, Ashley Judd, Rosario Dawson, Eric Andre, Michelle Rodriguez, Cameron Esposito and River Butcher, Ronna and Beverly, Casey Wilson, June Diane Raphael, and Morgan Walsh.[47]

Four days after the 59th Annual Grammy Awards, Maren Morris performed her first live show as a Grammy winner to a sold-out crowd at the 9:30 Club.[48]

Valentines Day 2017 was celebrated with Rick Astley, performing a number of popular covers in addition to songs from his newest album, 50, and the classic "Never Gonna Give You Up".[49]

March 5 and 6, 2017 presented another "Surprise! At the Club!" with two nights of The Flaming Lips, hamster ball and all.[50]

On August 19, 2017, 9:30 opened its doors to celebrate the life and art of prolific graffiti icon Cool "Disco" Dan, with performances from DJ Flexx, the Howard University Choir, and legendary go-go band Rare Essence, as well as an appearance by Mayor Muriel Bowser proclaiming August 19 "Cool 'Disco' Dan Day".[51]

Pop culture references edit

The 9:30 Club was mentioned in the Gilmore Girls' final season when Lane books a gig with her band Hep Alien.

In Designated Survivor, Aaron invites Emily to a date at the 9:30 Club.[52]

While filming A.P. Bio, comedian Patton Oswalt ad-libbed a rant about ska music featuring a story about the 9:30 Club, The Pietasters, No Doubt, Madness and more.[53]

The cupcake edit

 
9:30 Cupcake

During the band Cake's two-night run on May 30 and 31, 2009 (the club's 29th birthday), the 9:30 Club introduced the official 9:30 Cupcake, made by Buzz Bakeshop of Alexandria, Virginia. The 9:30 Cupcake is a devil's food cupcake with a buttercream center, chocolate frosting, and chocolate ganache, with the club's italicized “9:30” logo on the top in white icing. The cupcakes are now made fresh by the bakery, delivered to the club each morning, and are available for fans as well as musicians.

The 9:30 Hall of Records edit

 
The Hall of Records

Built for the 35th Anniversary "World's Fair" events and left as a growing monument to the club's history, the new Hall of Records documents every headlining performance to occur at the 9:30 Club since its inception in 1980. Catalogued in album form, the collection includes nearly 8,000 vinyl and CDs.[54]

In Print: 9:30 - A Time and a Place edit

Accompanying the World's Fair was the release of the "9:30 – A Time and A Place" oral and pictorial history book, featuring 265 pages of behind-the-scenes photographs stories from the venue's past told by staff and artists, including Public Enemy's Chuck D and Sarah McLachlan.[55]

On TV: Live at 9:30 edit

In February 2016, it was announced that the 9:30 Club had partnered with Squarespace, Shinola, and Destination DC to produce a new musically-centered variety show for PBS, featuring five acts per episode alongside a variety of comedy and short films. Artists include: Garbage, The Arcs, Tove Lo, Andrew McMahon in the Wilderness, Grace Potter, Trouble Funk, Troye Sivan, Frank Turner, Cold War Kids, and many more.

Live at 9:30 debuted in May, with a mix of contributors and hosts including Henry Rollins, NPR Music's Bob Boilen, Hannibal Buress, Jill Kargman, Ralphie May and Tony Rock.

While episodes are airing across the country, they are also available on www.liveat930.com.[56]

Awards edit

The 9:30 Club has been awarded "Nightclub of the Year" by Pollstar 13 times (more than any other club in Pollstar's history), including 5 years in a row from 2012 to 2016.[57]

For much of that time, it has regularly topped that concert industry trade journal's annual list of the top ticket-selling clubs in the United States.[5][11] In 2014, the 9:30 Club sold 284,309 tickets, the second most for a nightclub worldwide.[58]

The venue won the Top Club awards at the 2007 through 2012 Billboard Touring Awards, except in 2008, when the award was not presented.

Touring artists and managers in conjunction with Rolling Stone rated the club the No. 1 Big Room in America.[59]

In 2019, VenuesNow named the 9:30 Club "Venue of the Decade."[4]

References edit

  1. ^ Meet me at 9:30 https://washington.org/visit-dc/930-club-history-washington-dc#
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i Kiger, Patrick. (November 11, 2014). "The Epicenter of the 1980s Alternative Music Scene in DC". Boundary Stones. Retrieved August 14, 2016.
  3. ^ Staff (December 13, 2018). "10 Best Live Music Venues in America. From big rooms to intimate spaces, here's a selection of some of the country's best live music spots". Rolling Stone Magazine. Retrieved December 23, 2018.
  4. ^ a b Muret, Don (November 22, 2019). "VENUES OF THE DECADE". VenuesNow.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h Du Lac, J. Freedom. (April 18, 2010). "Misfits, new wave icons and giant rats: A history of D.C.'s 9:30 Club" (page 1/5). Washington Post Magazine. Retrieved August 12, 2016.
  6. ^ Du Lac, J. Freedom. (April 18, 2010). "Misfits, new wave icons and giant rats: A history of D.C.'s 9:30 Club" (page 3/5). Washington Post Magazine. Retrieved September 11, 2016.
  7. ^ Du Lac, J. Freedom. (April 18, 2010). "Misfits, new wave icons and giant rats: A history of D.C.'s 9:30 Club" (page 2/5). Washington Post Magazine. Retrieved August 12, 2016.
  8. ^ a b Du Lac, J. Freedom. (April 18, 2010). "Misfits, new wave icons and giant rats: A history of D.C.'s 9:30 Club" (page 5/5). Washington Post Magazine. Retrieved August 12, 2016.
  9. ^ Greenberg, Rudi. (December 31, 2015). "As the 9:30 Club turns 35, we explore some of its biggest secrets". Express. Retrieved August 14, 2016.
  10. ^ "A timely 9:30 Club tribute | business profile | Washington Blade". Washington Blade: Gay News, Politics, LGBT Rights. October 23, 2013. Retrieved July 2, 2019.
  11. ^ a b c d Harrington, Richard. (May 27, 2005). . The Washington Post. p. WE06. Retrieved August 14, 2016.
  12. ^ Andersen, Mark; Jenkins, Mark (Soft Skull Press, 2001). Dance of Days: Two Decades of Punk in the Nation's Capital. Fourth ed., 2009. Akashic Books. ISBN 9781933354996. p. 59.
  13. ^ Gastman, Roger (2016). 9:30 : a time and a place : 1980-2015, the first 35 years (1st ed.). Los Angeles, California. ISBN 978-0-692-58730-0. OCLC 937395837.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  14. ^ Andersen, Mark; Jenkins, Mark (Soft Skull Press, 2001). Dance of Days: Two Decades of Punk in the Nation's Capital. Fourth ed., 2009. Akashic Books. ISBN 9781933354996. p. 60.
  15. ^ Harrington, Richard (May 27, 1990). "The 9:30 Club, Just in Time; Ten Years Later, Still Catching the Next Wave". The Washington Post. p. G01.
  16. ^ Rites of Spring - Live at the 9:30 Club, Washington, D.C. 1985 (Complete and remastered), retrieved July 6, 2022
  17. ^ "Search for setlists: 9:30 Club (page 595) | setlist.fm". www.setlist.fm.
  18. ^ Boo Browning. (January 8, 1982). "Ulmer Defies The Easy Categories". The Washington Post. Retrieved April 26, 2020.
  19. ^ Andersen, Mark; Jenkins, Mark (Soft Skull Press, 2001). Dance of Days: Two Decades of Punk in the Nation's Capital. Fourth ed., 2009. Akashic Books. ISBN 9781933354996. pp. 59-60.
  20. ^ Freed, Benjamin. (October 28, 2014). "How the 9:30 Club’s Seth Hurwitz Built a Live-Music Empire". Washingtonian. Retrieved August 12, 2016.
  21. ^ Travis M. Andrews. "Rock-and-roll circle of life brings Foo Fighters back to D.C. on Atlantis opening night." Washington Post. 31 May 2023. Retrieved 1 June 2023.
  22. ^ Olson, Cathy Applefeld. "There Goes My (Hometown) Hero: Foo Fighters Open DC's Newest Venue As City Declares May 30 '9:30 Club Day'". Forbes. Retrieved June 1, 2023.
  23. ^ "Search for setlists: 9:30 Club 2004 (page 7) | setlist.fm". www.setlist.fm.
  24. ^ Joyce, Mike (July 2, 1999). "emmet swimming: "Earplugs 50 Cents"; Screaming Goddess". The Washington Post.
  25. ^ "Bob Dylan - Bob Links - Review - 12/04/97". my.execpc.com.
  26. ^ "Bob Dylan - Bob Links - Review - 12/05/97". my.execpc.com.
  27. ^ "Music". The Washington Post. August 21, 2012.
  28. ^ . Archived from the original on November 21, 2006. Retrieved March 3, 2007.
  29. ^ "The Side - Tour Infos". theside.free.fr.
  30. ^ "The Side:Pics".
  31. ^ "oarsa.org | ....of a revolution (O.A.R.) setlist archive". www.oarsa.org.
  32. ^ . HFStival.com Message Board. Archived from the original on December 10, 2007.
  33. ^ "Alice in Chains Kick Off U.S. Tour in DC". September 5, 2009.
  34. ^ "Hold On (4 Haiti): SELF, Steel Pulse, & Partners in Health". www.holdon4haiti.org.
  35. ^ . DCist. Archived from the original on November 5, 2017. Retrieved August 23, 2017.
  36. ^ "The Soul Rebels in Concert". NPR. Retrieved April 7, 2012.
  37. ^ Yarrison, Mary (September 24, 2012). "Adam Lambert Talks Marriage Equality Ahead of his 9:30 Club Fundraiser". Washingtonian. Retrieved August 24, 2017.
  38. ^ . DCist. Archived from the original on September 7, 2017. Retrieved August 24, 2017.
  39. ^ "Jack's Mannequin Everything In Transit 9:30 Club - BrightestYoungThings - DC". brightestyoungthings.com. Retrieved August 24, 2017.
  40. ^ "At the Drive-In Cancel Remaining North American Tour Dates". Spin. June 18, 2016. Retrieved August 24, 2017.
  41. ^ "Tom Petty turned back the clock with Mudcrutch at the 9:30 Club in D.C. on June 6". Washington Post. Retrieved August 24, 2017.
  42. ^ "ZZ Top - Tickets - 9:30 Club - Washington, DC - August 24th, 2016". 9:30 Club. Retrieved August 24, 2017.
  43. ^ Hausman, Tom. "Review: Invigorated by an animated crowd, Bastille electrifies the 9:30 Club". The Diamondback. Retrieved August 24, 2017.
  44. ^ McKenna, Dave; McKenna, Dave (October 4, 2016). "Green Day at 9:30 Club: As fun as a rock show can get". The Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved August 24, 2017.
  45. ^ Jenkins, Mark; Jenkins, Mark (December 15, 2016). "Two decades in, Jimmy Eat World is still all business". The Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved August 24, 2017.
  46. ^ "A Celebration of the Life and Music of Urban Verbs Guitarist Robert Goldstein - Tickets - 9:30 Club - Washington, DC - January 14th, 2017". 9:30 Club. Retrieved August 24, 2017.
  47. ^ "The National, Sleater-Kinney, Tig Notaro, More to Perform at Women's March After-Party | Pitchfork". pitchfork.com. Retrieved August 24, 2017.
  48. ^ "Maren Morris Announces Headlining Hero Tour". Rolling Stone. Retrieved August 24, 2017.
  49. ^ McKenna, Dave. "CONCERT REVIEW: Rick Astley covers 'Freebird' at 9:30 Club in D.C." The Washington Times. Retrieved August 24, 2017.
  50. ^ McKenna, Dave (March 6, 2017). "The Flaming Lips bring the whole bag of props to 9:30 Club". The Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved August 24, 2017.
  51. ^ . DCist. Archived from the original on August 26, 2017. Retrieved August 24, 2017.
  52. ^ Browne, Rembert (December 27, 2016). "Designated Survivor Recap: Inauguration Day". Vulture.
  53. ^ Oswalt, Patton (March 29, 2018). "Ska rant! #APBio".
  54. ^ "For One Week Only, The 9:30 Club Transforms Into a D.C. Music Museum". Washington City Paper. Retrieved August 23, 2017.
  55. ^ . 9:30 Club Book. Archived from the original on October 26, 2017. Retrieved August 23, 2017.
  56. ^ "Home". Live at 9:30. Retrieved August 23, 2017.
  57. ^ "Louis Messina, Marty Diamond, Foo Fighters, More Highlight 30th Annual Pollstar Awards". Pollstar.
  58. ^ "Pollstar: 2014 Year End Worldwide Ticket Sales - Top 200 Club Venues" (PDF). Pollstar Pro.
  59. ^ "The Best Big Rooms in America". Rolling Stone. April 25, 2013.

External links edit

  • Official website

Articles

  • Du Lac, J. Freedom; et al. (April 18, 2010). "Misfits, new wave icons and giant rats: A history of D.C.'s 9:30 Club" (interactive multimedia article). Washington Post Magazine.
  • Du Lac, J. Freedom. (April 18, 2010). "Misfits, new wave icons and giant rats: A history of D.C.'s 9:30 Club" (text-only article, page 1/5). Washington Post Magazine.
  • Tom (September 4, 2012). "Three Shows at the 9:30 Club". Ghosts of DC
  • Fame-ish (July 8, 2013). "HiddenDC: Loitering Outside the 9:30". FamousDC
  • Bray, Ryan; Comaratta, Len. (May 18, 2014). "An oral history of DC’s 9:30 Club: As told by Ian MacKaye, Henry Rollins, Bob Mould, and many others" (page 1/4). Consequence of Sound.
  • Kiger, Patrick. (November 11, 2014). "The Epicenter of the 1980s Alternative Music Scene in DC". Boundary Stones.
  • Destination DC (2016). "Meet Me at 9:30". Destination DC.
  • DePompa, Mary (January 12, 2016). "The 9:30 Club: A time and a place". WTOP.

Images

  • from John in Montana.
  • Historical 1986 photos of building exterior as WUST Radio, prior to becoming nightclub from Flickr.

club, 91806, 02389, 91806, 02389, 30belle, sebastian, performing, march, 2006former, namesatlantis, 1977, 1979, nightclub, 1980, address815, nwwashington, 20001, 3020locationu, street, corridorpublic, transitwashington, metro, streetownerjon, bowers, dody, dis. 38 55 5 N 77 1 26 W 38 91806 N 77 02389 W 38 91806 77 02389 9 30 ClubThe 9 30Belle and Sebastian performing at the 9 30 Club in March 2006Former namesAtlantis 1977 1979 Nightclub 9 30 1980 95 Address815 V St NWWashington D C 20001 3020LocationU Street CorridorPublic transitWashington Metro at U StreetOwnerJon Bowers and Dody DiSanto 1980 86 Richard Heinecke and Seth Hurwitz since 1986 Seating typeStanding room bar and balcony seating 2 Capacity1 200 1 OpenedMay 31 1980 May 31 1980 WebsiteVenue WebsiteThe 9 30 Club originally named Nightclub 9 30 also known simply as the 9 30 is a nightclub and concert venue in Washington D C In 2018 the 9 30 Club was named one of the 10 best live music venues in America by Rolling Stone and in 2019 the club was named Venue of the Decade by VenuesNow 3 4 The club was originally housed in the ground floor rear room of the Atlantic Building at 930 F Street NW in the city s downtown area where it opened on May 31 1980 5 with a legal standing capacity of 199 2 6 In 1996 the club was moved to a roomier space its current location at 815 V Street NW 2 5 where it anchors the eastern end of the U Street Corridor The 9 30 Club s name was derived from its original street address which was also the reason to set the venue s original opening time of 9 30 p m 7 Early advertising on D C s WHFS radio featured the slogan 9 30 a Place and Time The club has a distinctive wheeled stage mounted on rails which can be moved back and forth as needed This way the place can feel as packed with 500 people in attendance as it would during a sold out full capacity show 8 9 Fall Out Boy s Patrick Stump once said of the 9 30 it s got so much character you wonder if the locals know how lucky they are 10 Contents 1 History 1 1 Nightclub 9 30 1 2 9 30 Club 1 3 Significant moments 2 Pop culture references 3 The cupcake 4 The 9 30 Hall of Records 5 In Print 9 30 A Time and a Place 6 On TV Live at 9 30 7 Awards 8 References 9 External linksHistory editNightclub 9 30 edit nbsp Bad Brains at Nightclub 9 30 in 1983 nbsp The entrance to the original Nightclub 9 30 in the Atlantic Building in 1990 nbsp The interior of the original Nightclub 9 30 in 1990 with the stage visible in the backgroundNightclub 9 30 was founded by artist and dancer Dody DiSanto and her husband Jon Bowers a local real estate developer and music enthusiast who had just purchased the Atlantic Building in 1979 2 5 11 12 The Atlantic Building was full of artists even before it became the 9 30 club 13 The venue hosted its first show on May 31 1980 5 featuring New York based jazz punk outfit the Lounge Lizards as headliners and local new wave band Tiny Desk Unit as the opening act 2 5 14 New York s The Fleshtones were the first band ever to be booked at the club 15 Since its origins Nightclub 9 30 which allowed fans as young as sixteen to enter was known as a progressive venue noted for its talent in discovering up and coming acts During the early 1980s it was the home for alternative music in D C 2 just as the genre was beginning to blossom 5 By that point the club was based around local bands mainly from the punk hardcore and go go scenes 5 D C area acts such as Minor Threat played there in 83 Fugazi also played there in 94 Government Issue Iron Cross the Slickee Boys Urban Verbs Chuck Brown The Godfather of Go Go in 05 Maiesha and the Hip Huggers featuring E U Root Boy Slim and the Sex Change Band Rites of Spring played in 1985 16 and Dain Bramage whose teenage drummer Dave Grohl went on to become part of Nirvana and to found the Foo Fighters 2 The Foo Fighters also played there in 99 17 James Blood Ulmer played there in 1982 18 However in a very short time the venue also became a regular stopping point for punk and new wave bands touring the East Coast 19 Some of the most notable performers in the early days of Nightclub 9 30 were Black Flag the Bad Brains from D C also played there in 92 the Red Hot Chili Peppers the Psychedelic Furs Einsturzende Neubauten the Ramones X Blue Angel with lead singer Cyndi Lauper the Bangles R E M Husker Du Erasure Richard Hell and the Voidoids the Violent Femmes the Butthole Surfers That Petrol Emotion the Replacements Marti Jones Marshall Crenshaw Mod Fun The Dancing Cigarettes Nash the Slash the Go Go s and BETTY whose bassist and co vocalist Alyson Palmer tended bar in the club at the time On May 21 1981 Washington music programmer and writer Tom Terrell was instrumental in masterminding the U S premiere of reggae band Steel Pulse on the night of Bob Marley s funeral which was broadcast live worldwide from Nightclub 9 30 In 1986 after six years of operating the club Bowers and DiSanto sold it to Seth Hurwitz and Richard Heinecke of It s My Party I M P the Maryland based concert promotion company they co own 2 8 11 20 Over the following years as the club s prominence and lineup were growing the need for a bigger space was becoming increasingly evident In preparation for the move the owners purchased and extensively renovated the former WUST Radio Music Hall at 815 V Street The old Nightclub 9 30 closed its doors on December 31 1995 2 The club s final shows at the original location were memorialized on a two CD set released in 1997 and entitled 9 30 Live A Time A Place A Scene This live CD recorded between December 28 1995 and January 1 1996 includes local music from the Urban Verbs Tiny Desk Unit Mother May I The Insect Surfers Tru Fax and the Insaniacs and Black Market Baby In 2023 Hurwitz opened the Atlantis a small club designed to evoke the original Nightclub 9 30 21 In the opening ceremony the Mayor of D C designated May 30th as 9 30 Club Day 22 9 30 Club edit nbsp 9 30 Club in 2015Before the reopening the club owners organized a christening show for media and friends featuring the Fleshtones and Too Much Joy On January 5 1996 the new 9 30 Club opened to the public with a show that included the Smashing Pumpkins 11 NPR s online music show All Songs Considered broadcast some concerts at the venue There is an archive of these shows Washington D C based acts that have played at the 9 30 Club include Good Charlotte and Vertical Horizon in 2004 Joan Jett who briefly lived in Maryland in 2006 Mya in 2007 Wale in 2010 and SHAED in 2019 23 Significant moments edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed October 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp View from the balcony during Massive Attack s show on September 29 2006 nbsp Johnny Marr performing with The Cribs at the 9 30 Club in 2010Popular local band Emmet Swimming played one of the first shows at the new 9 30 on a snowy night and recorded part of their live concert CD Earplugs 50 at the venue 24 Bob Dylan played shows on December 4 25 and 5 26 1997 when he was in Washington D C to receive the Kennedy Center Honors Dylan returned for an unannounced show on April 2 2004 27 28 before scheduled dates at the Bender Arena and the Warner Theatre On June 12 1998 the Red Hot Chili Peppers performed a surprise eleven song set at the club Money Mark and the Propellerheads were the opening acts The show which was the band s first at the new venue they had previously performed at the old 9 30 Club five times from 1985 to 1987 was their first public performance since reuniting with guitarist John Frusciante who had quit the band in 1992 although the band had performed a short in studio acoustic set of mostly cover songs a week early for a radio show in Los Angeles The 9 30 Club show was seen as a warm up for their performance the next day at the Tibetan Freedom Concert which was held at the RFK Stadium in Washington D C when bad weather cancelled their set at the concert Pearl Jam shortened their own set so the Chili Peppers could perform a few songs 29 30 O A R whose members grew up in nearby Rockville Maryland recorded the live album Any Time Now at the 9 30 Club on November 23 and 24 2001 31 The venue also hosted the band s first four shows on their 2012 Extended Stay tour Gorillaz performed their second concert in the U S at The 9 30 Club on February 26 2002 their first U S show was in Boston at Avalon Ballroom on February 25 2002 On June 2 and 3 2002 Arizona band Jimmy Eat World recorded their live DVD Believe in What You Want at the nightclub following the release of their album Bleed American The video was released on November 26 2002 In 2003 local band the Pietasters released their first live video DVD Live at The 9 30 Club The Beastie Boys performed at the club on June 17 2004 after a five year hiatus This was a radio event sponsored by WHFS 99 1 FM which gave away all the tickets for the event to listeners A thunderstorm delayed the band s travel from New York City About 8 30 p m Radio DJs the Junkies and Tim Virgin read a statement from the Beastie Boys explaining the situation noting that they were on the train and saying the show would go on at about 11 15 p m The crowd was disappointed but the club relaxed its re admittance policy and allowed everyone to leave and have dinner if they so desired To further ease crowd tensions the Beastie Boys management had pizzas delivered to the club for fans 32 Mix Master Mike took the stage at 11 13 p m to warm up the crowd The Beastie Boys came out minutes later on stage in front of a packed house Posters of this late 9 30 Club performance are in the Beastie Boys video Triple Trouble pasted on the walls of the streets the group walk through at 2 13 The Smashing Pumpkins celebrated the release of Zeitgeist their first album in seven years at the 9 30 Club on July 10 2007 The event was depicted in the band s 2008 DVD documentary If All Goes Wrong Radiohead played a secret show at the venue on June 13 1998 in which Michael Stipe of R E M fame sang with the band on one of their hits They decided to play this show because their appearance at the Tibetan Freedom Concert held at the RFK Stadium was delayed to the next day due to bad weather Additionally the Beastie Boys Ed Kowalczyk of Live Brad Pitt Jennifer Aniston Dave Grohl of The Foo Fighters attended as part of the crowd Bob Mould performed at the club on October 7 2005 and released a subsequent DVD of the concert called Circle of Friends On November 24 2007 Hawthorne Heights guitarist and screamer Casey Calvert was found dead of a drug overdose on their tour bus which was parked outside the club In September 2009 the newly reunited Alice in Chains kicked off their U S tour at the 9 30 Club with new singer William DuVall 33 On December 28 2009 Clutch recorded their DVD Live at the 9 30 performing their self titled album Clutch in its entirety In May 2010 the legendary reggae band Steel Pulse performed their charity song Hold On for Haiti for the first time All proceeds from the song go to nonprofit organizations Solar Electric Light Fund and Partners In Health to solar electrify health clinics in Haiti 34 On May 31 2010 the 9 30 Club celebrated its 30th anniversary with a lineup stretching its history including Tiny Desk Unit The Fleshtones Tommy Keene The Slickee Boys The Psychedelic Furs Marti Jones and Don Dixon Clutch Trouble Funk The Evens Justin Jones The Pietasters Pete Stahl Ted Leo Bob Mould and Dave Grohl The event was hosted by Henry Rollins 35 In June 2010 Courtney Love and the newly reformed Hole performed a disastrous set described by The Washington Post as a three hour epic train wreck A barely coherent Love stumbled complained and stripped through an entire set composed mostly of incomplete versions of the band s songs Most members of the audience left before the set ended On July 30 2010 house music producer deadmau5 collapsed on stage in the middle of a set and was rushed to the hospital He had been suffering from exhaustion and vomiting This collapse led to the cancellation of the nine shows which followed the event On May 12 2011 Adele performed at the venue as part of her Adele Live tour She sold out the venue in less than two minutes and the show grossed 45 000 Back in 2009 she also performed her debut concert tour An Evening with Adele on January 17 On February 24 2012 the Soul Rebels Brass Band were the subject of an NPR national broadcast of their show with Galactic live from the 9 30 Club The broadcast was syndicated on NPR and through other affiliates across the United States as well as webcast on NPR org 36 On September 25 2012 Adam Lambert headlined a benefit hosted by Marylanders for Marriage Equality a group working to garner support for the state s ballot proposition to legislate marriage equality 37 On June 12 2013 Animal Collective performed a set of songs previously released on their LPs and EPs The show was documented on the album Live at 9 30 In 2013 hardcore punk supergroup Off released the limited edition vinyl album Live at 9 30 Club which featured their performance from June 25 2011 The Pixies performed a surprise show on May 31 2015 after their appearance at the Sweetlife Festival the day before In January 2016 9 30 celebrated its 35th birthday by opening its doors for an interactive exhibition detailing the club s vast history the 9 30 World s Fair This exhibition highlighted the pieces of the old 930 F St location that made the trip to 815 V St while taking dedicated fans through a tour of the venue like it had never been seen before including a look inside the dressing rooms and a peek at the hair dryer purchased specifically for James Brown 38 On January 27 2016 Jack s Mannequin returned to the road to honor the 10 year anniversary of the album Everything in Transit Playing just weeks after the death of David Bowie Andrew McMahon also performed an acoustic rendition of Life on Mars 39 In March 2016 At the Drive In s reunion tour was cut short after night one of two at the club when singer Cedric Bixler lost his voice due to illness 40 On June 6 2016 Tom Petty s pre Heartbreakers band Mudcrutch performed at the club on its very first tour despite being founded three decades earlier While not performing any Heartbreaker s hits their set included the traditional song Shady Grove perhaps as a nod to the DC Metro Station and a cover of Bob Dylan s Knockin on Heaven s Door 41 On August 24 2016 ZZ Top performed for a sold out audience the Surprise At the Club performance having only been announced two weeks prior Jonny 2 Bags Wickersham of Social Distortion opened the show which saw ZZ performing all of their classic hits before concluding with a cover of Elvis Presley s Jailhouse Rock 42 In support of Wild World Bastille sold out the club in minutes for their show on October 2 2016 just months before playing EagleBank Arena 43 The very next day October 3 2016 was another Surprise At the Club Green Day in preparation for their international Revolution Radio Tour An inside look at what the show meant to some of their fans can be seen in Episode 12 of Live at 9 30 44 December 14 2016 saw Jimmy Eat World return to 9 30 for another Surprise At the Club 45 On January 14 2017 9 30 opened its doors to celebrate the life and music of Urban Verbs guitarist and NPR music librarian Robert Goldstein with tribute performances including The Slickee Boys and Martha Hull amp The 7 Door Sedan 46 Later that month the 9 30 Club partnered with Planned Parenthood for two shows The first a free event titled Show Up took place on January 19 2017 featuring Common and The National The second was the official 2017 Women s March after party benefit show hosted by Funny or Die on January 21 2017 titled Laugh Dance then Get to Work Special guests at this performance included Senators Al Franken and Cory Booker Sleater Kinney Sara Bareilles Sam Harris of X Ambassadors Ted Leo Dirty Projectors David Longstreth The National Ani DiFranco Samantha Ronson Macklemore Tig Notaro Janeane Garofalo Lizzy Caplan Ashley Judd Rosario Dawson Eric Andre Michelle Rodriguez Cameron Esposito and River Butcher Ronna and Beverly Casey Wilson June Diane Raphael and Morgan Walsh 47 Four days after the 59th Annual Grammy Awards Maren Morris performed her first live show as a Grammy winner to a sold out crowd at the 9 30 Club 48 Valentines Day 2017 was celebrated with Rick Astley performing a number of popular covers in addition to songs from his newest album 50 and the classic Never Gonna Give You Up 49 March 5 and 6 2017 presented another Surprise At the Club with two nights of The Flaming Lips hamster ball and all 50 On August 19 2017 9 30 opened its doors to celebrate the life and art of prolific graffiti icon Cool Disco Dan with performances from DJ Flexx the Howard University Choir and legendary go go band Rare Essence as well as an appearance by Mayor Muriel Bowser proclaiming August 19 Cool Disco Dan Day 51 Pop culture references editThe 9 30 Club was mentioned in the Gilmore Girls final season when Lane books a gig with her band Hep Alien In Designated Survivor Aaron invites Emily to a date at the 9 30 Club 52 While filming A P Bio comedian Patton Oswalt ad libbed a rant about ska music featuring a story about the 9 30 Club The Pietasters No Doubt Madness and more 53 The cupcake edit nbsp 9 30 CupcakeDuring the band Cake s two night run on May 30 and 31 2009 the club s 29th birthday the 9 30 Club introduced the official 9 30 Cupcake made by Buzz Bakeshop of Alexandria Virginia The 9 30 Cupcake is a devil s food cupcake with a buttercream center chocolate frosting and chocolate ganache with the club s italicized 9 30 logo on the top in white icing The cupcakes are now made fresh by the bakery delivered to the club each morning and are available for fans as well as musicians The 9 30 Hall of Records edit nbsp The Hall of RecordsBuilt for the 35th Anniversary World s Fair events and left as a growing monument to the club s history the new Hall of Records documents every headlining performance to occur at the 9 30 Club since its inception in 1980 Catalogued in album form the collection includes nearly 8 000 vinyl and CDs 54 In Print 9 30 A Time and a Place editAccompanying the World s Fair was the release of the 9 30 A Time and A Place oral and pictorial history book featuring 265 pages of behind the scenes photographs stories from the venue s past told by staff and artists including Public Enemy s Chuck D and Sarah McLachlan 55 On TV Live at 9 30 editIn February 2016 it was announced that the 9 30 Club had partnered with Squarespace Shinola and Destination DC to produce a new musically centered variety show for PBS featuring five acts per episode alongside a variety of comedy and short films Artists include Garbage The Arcs Tove Lo Andrew McMahon in the Wilderness Grace Potter Trouble Funk Troye Sivan Frank Turner Cold War Kids and many more Live at 9 30 debuted in May with a mix of contributors and hosts including Henry Rollins NPR Music s Bob Boilen Hannibal Buress Jill Kargman Ralphie May and Tony Rock While episodes are airing across the country they are also available on www liveat930 com 56 Awards editThe 9 30 Club has been awarded Nightclub of the Year by Pollstar 13 times more than any other club in Pollstar s history including 5 years in a row from 2012 to 2016 57 For much of that time it has regularly topped that concert industry trade journal s annual list of the top ticket selling clubs in the United States 5 11 In 2014 the 9 30 Club sold 284 309 tickets the second most for a nightclub worldwide 58 The venue won the Top Club awards at the 2007 through 2012 Billboard Touring Awards except in 2008 when the award was not presented Touring artists and managers in conjunction with Rolling Stone rated the club the No 1 Big Room in America 59 In 2019 VenuesNow named the 9 30 Club Venue of the Decade 4 References edit Meet me at 9 30 https washington org visit dc 930 club history washington dc a b c d e f g h i Kiger Patrick November 11 2014 The Epicenter of the 1980s Alternative Music Scene in DC Boundary Stones Retrieved August 14 2016 Staff December 13 2018 10 Best Live Music Venues in America From big rooms to intimate spaces here s a selection of some of the country s best live music spots Rolling Stone Magazine Retrieved December 23 2018 a b Muret Don November 22 2019 VENUES OF THE DECADE VenuesNow a b c d e f g h Du Lac J Freedom April 18 2010 Misfits new wave icons and giant rats A history of D C s 9 30 Club page 1 5 Washington Post Magazine Retrieved August 12 2016 Du Lac J Freedom April 18 2010 Misfits new wave icons and giant rats A history of D C s 9 30 Club page 3 5 Washington Post Magazine Retrieved September 11 2016 Du Lac J Freedom April 18 2010 Misfits new wave icons and giant rats A history of D C s 9 30 Club page 2 5 Washington Post Magazine Retrieved August 12 2016 a b Du Lac J Freedom April 18 2010 Misfits new wave icons and giant rats A history of D C s 9 30 Club page 5 5 Washington Post Magazine Retrieved August 12 2016 Greenberg Rudi December 31 2015 As the 9 30 Club turns 35 we explore some of its biggest secrets Express Retrieved August 14 2016 A timely 9 30 Club tribute business profile Washington Blade Washington Blade Gay News Politics LGBT Rights October 23 2013 Retrieved July 2 2019 a b c d Harrington Richard May 27 2005 25 Years Later It s Still 9 30 The Washington Post p WE06 Retrieved August 14 2016 Andersen Mark Jenkins Mark Soft Skull Press 2001 Dance of Days Two Decades of Punk in the Nation s Capital Fourth ed 2009 Akashic Books ISBN 9781933354996 p 59 Gastman Roger 2016 9 30 a time and a place 1980 2015 the first 35 years 1st ed Los Angeles California ISBN 978 0 692 58730 0 OCLC 937395837 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Andersen Mark Jenkins Mark Soft Skull Press 2001 Dance of Days Two Decades of Punk in the Nation s Capital Fourth ed 2009 Akashic Books ISBN 9781933354996 p 60 Harrington Richard May 27 1990 The 9 30 Club Just in Time Ten Years Later Still Catching the Next Wave The Washington Post p G01 Rites of Spring Live at the 9 30 Club Washington D C 1985 Complete and remastered retrieved July 6 2022 Search for setlists 9 30 Club page 595 setlist fm www setlist fm Boo Browning January 8 1982 Ulmer Defies The Easy Categories The Washington Post Retrieved April 26 2020 Andersen Mark Jenkins Mark Soft Skull Press 2001 Dance of Days Two Decades of Punk in the Nation s Capital Fourth ed 2009 Akashic Books ISBN 9781933354996 pp 59 60 Freed Benjamin October 28 2014 How the 9 30 Club s Seth Hurwitz Built a Live Music Empire Washingtonian Retrieved August 12 2016 Travis M Andrews Rock and roll circle of life brings Foo Fighters back to D C on Atlantis opening night Washington Post 31 May 2023 Retrieved 1 June 2023 Olson Cathy Applefeld There Goes My Hometown Hero Foo Fighters Open DC s Newest Venue As City Declares May 30 9 30 Club Day Forbes Retrieved June 1 2023 Search for setlists 9 30 Club 2004 page 7 setlist fm www setlist fm Joyce Mike July 2 1999 emmet swimming Earplugs 50 Cents Screaming Goddess The Washington Post Bob Dylan Bob Links Review 12 04 97 my execpc com Bob Dylan Bob Links Review 12 05 97 my execpc com Music The Washington Post August 21 2012 Bob Dylan Bob Links Reviews 4 2 04 Archived from the original on November 21 2006 Retrieved March 3 2007 The Side Tour Infos theside free fr The Side Pics oarsa org of a revolution O A R setlist archive www oarsa org Beastie Boys 9 30 Club 6 17 04 HFStival com Message Board Archived from the original on December 10 2007 Alice in Chains Kick Off U S Tour in DC September 5 2009 Hold On 4 Haiti SELF Steel Pulse amp Partners in Health www holdon4haiti org 9 30 Club Celebrates 30th Anniversary DCist Archived from the original on November 5 2017 Retrieved August 23 2017 The Soul Rebels in Concert NPR Retrieved April 7 2012 Yarrison Mary September 24 2012 Adam Lambert Talks Marriage Equality Ahead of his 9 30 Club Fundraiser Washingtonian Retrieved August 24 2017 Photos The 9 30 Club Is Transformed Into A Festive Pop Up Museum DCist Archived from the original on September 7 2017 Retrieved August 24 2017 Jack s Mannequin Everything In Transit 9 30 Club BrightestYoungThings DC brightestyoungthings com Retrieved August 24 2017 At the Drive In Cancel Remaining North American Tour Dates Spin June 18 2016 Retrieved August 24 2017 Tom Petty turned back the clock with Mudcrutch at the 9 30 Club in D C on June 6 Washington Post Retrieved August 24 2017 ZZ Top Tickets 9 30 Club Washington DC August 24th 2016 9 30 Club Retrieved August 24 2017 Hausman Tom Review Invigorated by an animated crowd Bastille electrifies the 9 30 Club The Diamondback Retrieved August 24 2017 McKenna Dave McKenna Dave October 4 2016 Green Day at 9 30 Club As fun as a rock show can get The Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Retrieved August 24 2017 Jenkins Mark Jenkins Mark December 15 2016 Two decades in Jimmy Eat World is still all business The Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Retrieved August 24 2017 A Celebration of the Life and Music of Urban Verbs Guitarist Robert Goldstein Tickets 9 30 Club Washington DC January 14th 2017 9 30 Club Retrieved August 24 2017 The National Sleater Kinney Tig Notaro More to Perform at Women s March After Party Pitchfork pitchfork com Retrieved August 24 2017 Maren Morris Announces Headlining Hero Tour Rolling Stone Retrieved August 24 2017 McKenna Dave CONCERT REVIEW Rick Astley covers Freebird at 9 30 Club in D C The Washington Times Retrieved August 24 2017 McKenna Dave March 6 2017 The Flaming Lips bring the whole bag of props to 9 30 Club The Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Retrieved August 24 2017 During Memorial For D C Graffiti Legend Cool Disco Dan Mayor Names Day For Him DCist Archived from the original on August 26 2017 Retrieved August 24 2017 Browne Rembert December 27 2016 Designated Survivor Recap Inauguration Day Vulture Oswalt Patton March 29 2018 Ska rant APBio For One Week Only The 9 30 Club Transforms Into a D C Music Museum Washington City Paper Retrieved August 23 2017 9 30 Club Book 9 30 Club Book Archived from the original on October 26 2017 Retrieved August 23 2017 Home Live at 9 30 Retrieved August 23 2017 Louis Messina Marty Diamond Foo Fighters More Highlight 30th Annual Pollstar Awards Pollstar Pollstar 2014 Year End Worldwide Ticket Sales Top 200 Club Venues PDF Pollstar Pro The Best Big Rooms in America Rolling Stone April 25 2013 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to 9 30 Club Official websiteArticles Du Lac J Freedom et al April 18 2010 Misfits new wave icons and giant rats A history of D C s 9 30 Club interactive multimedia article Washington Post Magazine Du Lac J Freedom April 18 2010 Misfits new wave icons and giant rats A history of D C s 9 30 Club text only article page 1 5 Washington Post Magazine Tom September 4 2012 Three Shows at the 9 30 Club Ghosts of DC Fame ish July 8 2013 HiddenDC Loitering Outside the 9 30 FamousDC Bray Ryan Comaratta Len May 18 2014 An oral history of DC s 9 30 Club As told by Ian MacKaye Henry Rollins Bob Mould and many others page 1 4 Consequence of Sound Kiger Patrick November 11 2014 The Epicenter of the 1980s Alternative Music Scene in DC Boundary Stones Destination DC 2016 Meet Me at 9 30 Destination DC DePompa Mary January 12 2016 The 9 30 Club A time and a place WTOP Images Historical 1969 photo of building exterior as WUST Radio prior to becoming nightclub from John in Montana Historical 1986 photos of building exterior as WUST Radio prior to becoming nightclub from Flickr Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 9 30 Club amp oldid 1187578725, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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