Stuck To The Floor 2020, a short film about The Marquee Club PLEASE LIKE AND SUBSCRIBE, IT'S FREE

Streamed on:
25

WHY NOT SUPPORT MY CHANNEL BY BUYING ME A COFFEE AT
Ko-fi.com/punkrocknineteenseventies
------------------------------------------------------------
CHECK OUT YOUR YOUTUBE CHANNEL / @punkrockuk1970s AND LIKE AND SUBSCRIBE, IT'S ALL FREE.
-------------------------------------------------------------- / @punkrockuk1970s
BEFORE YOU START READING PLEASE CAN YOU LIKE AND SUBSCRIBE TO MY CHANNEL. IT WILL HELP GETTING MORE CONTENT TO THE CHANNEL, ENJOY.
The Marquee Club was a music venue in London, England, which opened in 1958 with a range of jazz and skiffle acts. It was a small and relatively cheap club, in the heart of London's West End.

It was the location of the first live performance by the Rolling Stones on 12 July 1962.[1][2]

Origins
The club was established by Harold Pendleton, an accountant whose love of jazz had led him to become secretary of the National Jazz Federation. Originally it was located in the Marquee Ballroom in the basement of the Academy Cinema in Oxford Street, where dances had been held since the early 1950s. Its decor was designed by Angus McBean with a striped canopy to imitate a marquee. Pendleton took over management of the ballroom, and the first Jazz at the Marquee night was held on 19 April 1958. Johnny Dankworth, Chris Barber, Alexis Korner and Cyril Davies were early resident performers, and Tubby Hayes and Joe Harriott were also regular performers. In 1962 the club began a regular R&B night that occasionally featured visiting American musicians such as Muddy Waters. Pendleton also launched the National Jazz Festival in 1961 in Richmond; this was the precursor to the Reading and Leeds Festivals.[3] By 1963 the club had become most noted for its R&B acts, including Davies, Brian Auger and Manfred Mann–who played there a record 102 times between 1962 and 1976–but Pendleton was forced to find a new venue when his lease expired.[4]

The 1970s
The Marquee Club also nurtured a large social scene based around the record industry, with record company heads and their A&R representatives visiting the venue on a daily basis, often talent spotting. The venue also attracted many famous musicians and recording artists who simply used the VIP Bar to socialise in. The Marquee staff became an integral part of the club as much as the bands that performed there.[citation needed]

The Faces performed at The Marquee on 7 December 1970. Queen performed at the club three times in the beginning of their career. First on 8 January 1971, then on 20 December 1972, and on 9 April 1973, as their first gig after signing with the Trident record company.[12][13] In 1972, Status Quo took to the stage with a blistering set, including "Paper Plane", the video for which was filmed during this gig. On 18, 19 & 20 October 1973, Be-Bop Deluxe and String Driven Thing appeared on the same bill in 1974, David Bowie filmed The 1980 Floor Show at the Marquee for the American NBC TV late night show The Midnight Special.[14] NBC used the Marquee Studios (housed beside the venue) as dressing rooms for the cast.

Although never a seminal punk venue, the club nevertheless embraced the burgeoning punk rock movement of the late 1970s and regularly promoted punk and new wave nights into the 1980s. Bands such as Doctors of Madness appeared frequently throughout the mid-70's, often supported by future star bands such as The Jam. Mainstream rock acts appeared regularly at the venue.

Loading 1 comment...