I was at the REM show.Saw Squeeze and REM there on consecutive nights. Summer of 85 or 86
I was at the REM show.Saw Squeeze and REM there on consecutive nights. Summer of 85 or 86
I didn't want to pile on. Maybe the best time I ever had there was a Friday when I bud and I made gametime decision to head over late. It was packed but just as we drove in, a car left from a legal spot right up front. We get out and a guy wants to sell me a ticket for 10 dollars. I ask why, it's only $9.50 at the door. He says, I mean 10 for 2. OK. We enter just as the lights go down and decide to head for the stage, foregoing another beer. As crowded as it was, we got to the stage like the Red Sea parted for us. Just as it's about to start I kick something. Two Heineken's on the rings! Eddie Money and his band come out and rock for two hours. No ballads. Maybe the best 5 bucks I ever spent.
Bingo!Hungry Charlie’s… then Caleb’s Tavern. Right next to the venerable Mory’s.
Anyone remember the name of the man who ran the tune inn and also booked the moon cafe nine and a bunch of other great original rooms in New Haven? Just the best. A legend.I went to my first hardcore shows at the Tune Inn, but that was in 97 and I have no idea what it was before that. I was never a big fan of Toad's. I only went there a few times and I played there once too.
I was in New Haven that night too at one of the pizza places near ToadsOK, I used to go to Ron's Place, Rudy's, the Grotto, Toad's Place, I've been to Tune Inn and the Moon. There's the Coliseum, of course.
GREAT, GREAT, GREAT.
Now, my real reason for starting this thread: friends and I are having a little disagreement about a club in the 80s located on Center Street. It used to be an arcade, followed by a club that I believe was named "The Cave" and then it eventually became "The Urban Jungle" around 1990. It closed and became the Tune Inn later that decade.
Does anyone know the name of the place before it was "The Urban Jungle"?
OK, so to make this a little more fun, best music experience in New Haven:
1. We saw Tin Machine in front of a light crowd at Toad's; Bowie was right there, 10 feet away (or less) from anyone who wanted to get near, which was easy to do in a sparse crowd. A few months later he played a sold out HCC.
Worst experience:
1. A friend in the music industry told me the Rolling Stones were going to play Toad's in a few hours. I didn't believe him but I did head down there with a friend, we walked into Toad's at about 6 pm, had a few drinks, didn't look like anything was happening. So we left... We were idiots because we even saw someone dismantling a pay phone and thought nothing of it... Yes, the Rolling Stones played Toad's that night.
What band were you in?I went to my first hardcore shows at the Tune Inn, but that was in 97 and I have no idea what it was before that. I was never a big fan of Toad's. I only went there a few times and I played there once too.
I would have been there too, but I had to work. Sons of Bob opened as I recall.OK, I used to go to Ron's Place, Rudy's, the Grotto, Toad's Place, I've been to Tune Inn and the Moon. There's the Coliseum, of course.
GREAT, GREAT, GREAT.
Now, my real reason for starting this thread: friends and I are having a little disagreement about a club in the 80s located on Center Street. It used to be an arcade, followed by a club that I believe was named "The Cave" and then it eventually became "The Urban Jungle" around 1990. It closed and became the Tune Inn later that decade.
Does anyone know the name of the place before it was "The Urban Jungle"?
OK, so to make this a little more fun, best music experience in New Haven:
1. We saw Tin Machine in front of a light crowd at Toad's; Bowie was right there, 10 feet away (or less) from anyone who wanted to get near, which was easy to do in a sparse crowd. A few months later he played a sold out HCC.
Worst experience:
1. A friend in the music industry told me the Rolling Stones were going to play Toad's in a few hours. I didn't believe him but I did head down there with a friend, we walked into Toad's at about 6 pm, had a few drinks, didn't look like anything was happening. So we left... We were idiots because we even saw someone dismantling a pay phone and thought nothing of it... Yes, the Rolling Stones played Toad's that night.
Anyone remember the name of the man who ran the tune inn and also booked the moon cafe nine and a bunch of other great original rooms in New Haven? Just the best. A legend.
I’ll hang up and listen.
.I was also at that show. I saw The Pretenders at Woolsey Hall also. Note: I saw U2 & years later Bon Jovi at Toad’s place.I saw U2 at Woolsey Hall in May of 83, right before they became big. Great venue.
Ding ding ding! ExcellentFernando Pinto… crazy bastard.
One could make quite the night bouncing around New Haven in the late 70’s/early 80’s. Toad’s, Agora, Arcadia Ballroom (aka Brawlroom), Keg House, Oxford Ale House, Great American Saloon, Grotto or just sit on the hood of the car in front of Ron’s Place and and freak watch.
Drinking age was 18 and life was simpler.
On a morning from a Bogart movieI would have been there too, but I had to work. Sons of Bob opened as I recall.
Saw Tom Tom Club there, though and Al Stewart. Not the same. Fleetwood Mac at Tragnassal!
He is still booking shows at cafe 9 and some jazz room as well as some outdoor things around east rock.Ding ding ding! Excellent
Which meant drinking age was 16...Fernando Pinto… crazy bastard.
One could make quite the night bouncing around New Haven in the late 70’s/early 80’s. Toad’s, Agora, Arcadia Ballroom (aka Brawlroom), Keg House, Oxford Ale House, Great American Saloon, Grotto or just sit on the hood of the car in front of Ron’s Place and freak watch.
Drinking age was 18 and life was simpler.
Yup I know.He is still booking shows at cafe 9 and some jazz room as well as some outdoor things around east rock.
Yeah… my bad for not adding “Legal” before drinking age (Malone’s)Which meant drinking age was 16...
It’s driving me nuts… it was next to Vito’s Deli. Rock Club keeps jumping in my head but not positive. Think building ended its life as the Brass Monkey and burned down.Darn it, no one is going to remember what that place was called in the late 80s!>!>!>! This is going to kill me.
Remember third world cafe on Whalley?Yeah… my bad for not adding “Legal” before drinking age (Malone’s)
It’s driving me nuts… it was next to Vito’s Deli. Rock Club keeps jumping in my head but not positive. Think building ended its life as the Brass Monkey and burned down.
Third World INTERNATIONAL Cafe!Remember third world cafe on Whalley?
fixed that 4 UThird World MEDELLIN Cafe!
Why not call the New Haven Chamber of Commerce and ask them to check their records for that time period, or if you want to be ambitious, call the New Haven Assessor's Office for the personal property taxes for that property address? Or, if you live in the area, check out their records.It’s driving me nuts… it was next to Vito’s Deli. Rock Club keeps jumping in my head but not positive.
Best Video had, and most likely still does have, a lot of Bluegrass music and even a weekly, open to the public and free, jam session in bluegrass with musicians playing and singing around a circle.I'm not listing any place where I cannot explicitly remember who I saw there (NH Coliseum?) or know I never heard music there (Yale Bowl), or house/loft space concerts, or from temporary stages at neighborhood festivals (Westville Art Walk, Quinnipiac River Festival), or wherever I've no doubt forgotten about. Definitely saw some Yale Jazz Festival performances within a Morse College lounge, and Jane Ira Bloom in a performance space within one of the other residential colleges.
Toad's Place
Oxford Ale House -> Great American Saloon
Great American Music Hall (have to look up the exact name of the place in Whaley Ave where I saw James Brown, and also an Oasis d'Neon two show punk festival with more than a dozen bands)
Ron's Place
The Grotto
Shubert Theater
College Street Music Hall
Cafe Nine
Lyric Hall
The State House
Three Sheets
Woolsey Hall
Morse Recital Hall
Battel Chapel
Lyman Center
Pardee-Morris House
Westville Music Bowl
New Haven Green
Edgerton Park
Beecher Park
Edgewood Park
HAMDEN (the next town north)
Best Video
Outer Space
Spaceland Ballroom
Town Center Park
I'll leave out naming artists other than a couple above, but will respond if challenged or requested. Many performances were quite fine, whether the artists were famous or not, and the music spanned across rock, punk rock, soul, jazz, classical, folk, world, Americana, and more.
Signs of Hope. We were not that good.What band were you in?
Add folk series at mActivity in East RockHe is still booking shows at cafe 9 and some jazz room as well as some outdoor things around east rock.