Make Art Everyday

9:30 Club

Manage Item click to manage
9:30 Club

America's most decorated nightclub started with 199 legal capacity and a rat problem. The 9:30 Club opened on 31 May 1980 in the Atlantic Building at 930 F Street NW - name and opening hour both taken from the address - and spent fifteen years breaking acts like Nirvana, R.E.M., Red Hot Chili Peppers, Fugazi, Bad Brains and Public Enemy in a cramped, oddly shaped room as famous for its stench as its bookings. In January 1996 owners Seth Hurwitz and Rich Heinecke moved the operation to the former WUST Radio Music Hall at 815 V Street NW - a building that decades earlier had been Duke Ellington's club - opening with two sold-out Smashing Pumpkins shows. The V Street room was designed to be the best big club and the best small club at once: the stage sits on rails and rolls forward or back with ticket sales, so 300 people or a sold-out 1,200 both see a full house. The formula made the club a fixture atop the industry charts - four-time Pollstar Nightclub of the Year and a perennial leader in club ticket sales nationally - and the anecdotes pile up accordingly, from the house hair dryer bought for James Brown to the 2016 anniversary exhibition that let fans tour the dressing rooms. Anchoring the eastern end of the U Street Corridor a short walk from the U Street Metro station, the club runs standing-room floors with bar and balcony seating, hundreds of shows a year across every genre, and a batch of house traditions - the birthday cupcakes for artists are the best known. For touring bands a 9:30 date remains a rite of passage; for Washington, the club is simply where live music lives. The club's story has been told at feature length - the 2016 documentary short series 9:30 Big Ten and years of oral histories celebrate the F Street era's grimy legend and the V Street era's professional polish - and the operation's influence extends through its owners' I.M.P. company, which also books The Anthem and Merriweather Post Pavilion. Doors typically open an hour before showtime, the marquee mixes arena names playing small with tomorrow's headliners playing early, and the smell, veterans confirm, stayed behind on F Street.

This 5 rated description was provided by Mac

To rate this description and view other descriptions, click here

Type: Theater / Concert Hall

Address: 815 V Street NW, Washington, DC, United States, 20001

Website: https://www.930.com

Capacity: 1200

Opening Date: 05/01/1996

Serves Food

Theater / Concert Hall Ratings (0)

No ratings available yet.

search around here for an event or a venue

Events with Tickets Available (104)

Showing 1 to 10 of 104 events with tickets

Upcoming Events (104 total upcoming events)

Showing 1 to 10 of 104 upcoming events

Past Events (42 total past events)

Showing 1 to 10 of 42 past events

Entertainment News

No news available.

User Ratings


Your Rating

CHARACTERS left: 2000
Comfort:
Atmosphere:
Acoustics:
Value For Money:

0 Fans

Comments

CHARACTERS left: 2000