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is it true that prince couldnt have performed at first avenue without white band members? theres an andrea swensson interview where she says that ironically as prince made first avenue so famous, he wouldnt have been able to peform there in the early days of his career without a mixed band, as black bands just werent booked there. that could also be a genre thing, i.e. no funk or R&B, or it could be a coded way to exclude black bands. either way, does anyone know if this is true? for some reason this surprised me, as that club is so associated with prince in my mind, i never expected that it wasnt always an option for him.
https://mspmag.com/arts-and-culture/qa-andrea-swensson-prince-expert/
[Edited 11/8/20 21:28pm] | |
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Wow! I had never heard this before. (And I read a lot of Prince information & listen to Podcasts...) I think even though he is not with us, there will always be something more...thank goodness. Good morning children...take a look out your window, the world is falling... | |
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What about The Time? | |
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> that could also be a genre thing, i.e. no funk or R&B
Probably something closer to this, because genres were really segregated then. The Wiki for the club says Lipps, Inc. broke the barrier, but also credits The Time ...and says it was a Disco prior to First Avenue, and then borrowed the Danceteria. It also mentions booking Bo Diddley, so there's something to that story but the detaiils are off. | |
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- From wikipedia : https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/First_Avenue_(nightclub) - Facility, opening[edit]The Minneapolis Greyhound Lines depot was built in the Streamline Moderne style in 1937.
The building opened as a bus depot in 1937, decades after Greyhound Lines was founded in Hibbing, Minnesota. It was noted for its Art Deco style and amenities of air conditioning, shower rooms, and public telephones. The interior floor was checkered terrazzo, while the exterior was shiny blue bricks with white trim.[3] The station moved to its present location on 10th Street in 1968.[4] The transformation from a bus depot into a concert venue has a disputed history.[4] Clearly, Allan Fingerhut, heir to the Fingerhut catalog company, had capital and invested $150,000, and Danny Stevens of Danny's Reasons had a hard-to-get liquor license.[4] Both men agree promoter Skip Goucher had the original idea for a nightclub in the bus depot.[4] They opened The Depot on April 3, 1970, with Joe Cocker and a stage crowded with 27 musicians and singers who turned in two magnificent sets.[4] Among Cocker's Mad Dogs & Englishmen that day were Leon Russell, Rita Coolidge, Claudia Lennear, Jim Keltner, Jim Price and Bobby Keys.[5] Disco era[edit]Following two years of steady business, The Depot was faced with a new reality: the public music scene was changing. Psychedelic rock was out and disco was in. In order to stay on top of this new trend, the club needed to change its image. After a short remodel, The Depot in July 1972, evolved into Uncle Sam's, a national franchise of the American Avents Corporation of Cincinnati. A red, white, and blue patriotic-themed club with recorded dance music, a drummer, a DJ, and a light-up plexiglass dance floor became what doorman Richard Luka described as, "Studio 54 for the discriminating Kmart shopper." [6] In about late 1973, Steve McClellan (who'd become the club's talent buyer and eventually general manager)[7] started working at Uncle Sam's as a bartender.[8] He would enter American Avents' management training in 1975. After American Avents left in 1979, general manager Steve McClellan hired his former high school classmate Jack Meyers to help him manage money.[8] Dan Lessard managed the bar staff. The club's name was shortened to Sam's in early 1980. The club got its third name change on New Year's Eve 1981 when it became First Avenue.[9]
Chrissie Dunlap began to work days in the office in 1979, about the time McClellan booked the Ramones and Pat Benatar in back-to-back, sell out concerts. Disc jockeys Kevin Cole and Roy Freedom developed weekend dance nights dubbed Danceteria after the New York club, often creating enough business to pay the club's bills. To fill the space, McClellan booked male strippers and female mud wrestlers. McClellan and his assistant Dunlap booked Bo Diddley, the first of many rock elders booked during Dunlap's nine-year tour of duty.[13] During the era's wild west of settlement with artists, Steve McClellan was known as one of the few reliable promoters in the United States.[14]
The Prince explosion[edit]Discrimination had created a race barrier in downtown Minneapolis. Encouraged by Dunlap to write their own material,[15] Jimmy Jam and his 11-piece Mind & Matter were able to break through with bookings by McClellan in the 1970s. First booking the one-hit wonder Lipps, Inc., with lead singer Cynthia Johnson, McClellan decided to book Prince in 1981, for $2,500 plus part of the gate. Before he died in 2016, Prince was to play nine full First Avenue concerts. Eventually, many of his fans thought he owned the club.[15] Recorded live in 1983 from a Record Plant truck parked outside at one of those shows, Purple Rain became the title of the film Purple Rain. Prince's management team offered First Avenue $100,000 to use the mainroom for filming in late November and December 1983, with the clause that the Entry would remain open. Most of the club's employees were extras in the film. The production gave the club its patch panel and dimmer packs. McClellan feared the audience had changed from genuine music lovers to a lot of tourists, still, he and Meyers were grateful for the boost in revenue.[15] - [Edited 11/9/20 4:13am] "The whole problem with the world is that fools and fanatics are always so certain of themselves. And wiser people so full of doubts" (Bertrand Russell 1872-1972) | |
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thanks, but that doesnt give me details on black acts! | |
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- Purely informative, and, i put it on here because of Disco, I thought it was bascally known for it's black gay invention and support... And then as i come to think of it, the movie 'Saturday Night Fever', had not much to do with the black disco scene... It is true that there were few black artists booked.. -
[Edited 11/9/20 4:13am] "The whole problem with the world is that fools and fanatics are always so certain of themselves. And wiser people so full of doubts" (Bertrand Russell 1872-1972) | |
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This was TRUE of ALL of the American Apartheid segregated music industry at the time.
Radio Stations, MTV/Video shows, Concert Tours, Venues, Artist Marketing were all segregated, exclusionary and racist. | |
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As popular as "Saturday Night Fever" was for escalating disco in the late 70's mainstream, the film was bashed, criticized and seen as a joke by the NYC underground black/hispanic/gay club crowd. .....They felt that the Italian-Americans were exploiting their scene. Despite that, I still love the film. | |
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jdcxc said: This was TRUE of ALL of the American Apartheid segregated music industry at the time.
Radio Stations, MTV/Video shows, Concert Tours, Venues, Artist Marketing were all segregated, exclusionary and racist. I guess its not a surprise when you think of it being a breakthrough for prince to get on MTV in 82, but its just, I didnt think that it would be the case with first Avenue as to me when I think of the club, I think of prince. But then I now know it's a rock venue first and foremost. | |
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Sorry, it's the Hodgkin's talking. | |
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TrivialPursuit said:
We forget that don't we? Time keeps on slipping into the future...
This moment is all there is... | |
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But he was replying to the OP's urban legend that 'if you had literally more than two black guys in your band, you couldn't play downtown'
. the UL is allegedly from guys in Funk bands. First Avenue went through about 4 incarnations Uncle Sams The DEPOT . so I think it would be more about Music genre, than race along with male strippers and female mud wrestlers. The DePot was Psychedelic rock .
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[Edited 11/9/20 14:17pm] Sorry, it's the Hodgkin's talking. | |
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OldFriends4Sale said:
But he was replying to the OP's urban legend that 'if you had literally more than two black guys in your band, you couldn't play downtown'
. the UL is allegedly from guys in Funk bands. First Avenue went through about 4 incarnations Uncle Sams The DEPOT . so I think it would be more about Music genre, than race along with male strippers and female mud wrestlers. The DePot was Psychedelic rock .
Aw. Time keeps on slipping into the future...
This moment is all there is... | |
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I don't have the First Avenue History book here, but DO know that The Ike and Tina Turner Review played FA long before Prince. [Edited 11/17/20 18:28pm] Welcome to "the org", laytonian… come bathe with me. | |
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Sounds more like revisionist history to me. People continue to look back and apply race and gender stuff to things they know little about.
As much as Prince called out racist things later in his career there is no doubt he would have said something. Also, I doubt anyone could have influenced Prince to do something he did not have a mind to do. You telling me he could stand up to a record label at 19 but not a club?
Again, makes no sense at all. | |
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FWIW on a slightly different subject, here's something on Uncle Sam's in the 70's. From a Current blog reporting on a Minnesota History Center First Avenue exhibit:
[Edited 11/9/20 19:12pm] | |
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One other somewhat related thing. Can't resist inserting myself in here, because I was lucky enough to attend this panel discussion. Loved hearing from Steve McClellan! "Swensson got a big laugh with a shot of Prince giving side-eye as she told the story about the young musician going on American Bandstand, where Dick Clark declared, “This isn’t the kind of music that comes out of Minneapolis!” Swensson’s new book Got to Be Something Here is part of a long-term, wide-ranging effort by many individuals and organizations to document and celebrate the rich African-American musical communities in Minnesota, communities that produced Prince but that the world’s Dick Clarks were unaware of. Clark wasn’t the only one. Steve McClellan, general manager of First Avenue from the mid-1970s into the early 2000s, described how hearing the Numero Group’s Purple Snow compilation (2013) opened his ears to just how many amazing local R&B and soul groups weren’t even on his radar back before Prince changed everything. McClellan described being proud to employ black staffers and book black artists, but he admitted that it was only in the later 1980s, when First Ave actually began to attract predominantly black audiences for some shows, that he more fully understood the kind of institutional racism that had led to the forced closure of venues bringing African-American entertainment downtown." [Edited 11/9/20 17:51pm] | |
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"February 1969: Korsh and Foley faced misdemeanor indecency charges for displaying a poster in their store window with an illustration of then President Richard Nixon and his wife, Pat, standing together nude, just like John Lennon and Yoko Ono on the “Two Virgins” album cover. Local media picked up on the story, charges were dropped and the poster became a hot seller. April 1970: New co-owner Keith Covart was arrested for putting up a stars-and-stripes flag with a peace symbol where the 50 stars usually are. He went to trial for desecration of Old Glory, and he prevailed because the court ruled that it wasn’t officially an American flag. 1970: The Fetus moved across the street to 514 Cedar Av. S. March 1972: The Fetus ran its infamous naked sale: Take your clothes off in the store and get a free LP and smoking pipe. About 50 people took advantage of the promotion, which caused controversy with the store’s landlord."
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no its cool to go a bit off topic. its all painting a better picture of the scene in mpls which i dont know tons about TBH so good to read | |
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i just wanna know if in the 70s, did FA book guys like bb king, or bo diddley, etc? you know black artists but who were more acceptable as they were part of 'rock' rather than the modern black styles of the day. just curious.
i just checked princevault and it looks like he first played live there when it was sams in 1981 | |
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Yep Morris Day, Jellybean and Monte followed by Jerome
All of them except for Morris and Jesse ended up doing work with Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis off and on in connection with Janet's two album period | |
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Good question. Yes. BB King played there in 1970, so did Ramsey Lewis, Al Jarreau and Pacific Gas and Electric, which had a Black lead and a white band, and a band called Exuma who sound wild. https://twincitiesmusichighlights.net/venues/depot/
[Edited 11/10/20 12:25pm] [Edited 11/10/20 18:42pm] | |
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the issue was following or having a hit record that fill up the place.first ave did denie prince there until he had a hit record. | |
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