
"For the first time in nearly two decades, CBGB, the beloved Lower East Side punk venue, was back in the New York groove, but in a different form and in a new setting. Last weekend, nearly 10,000 fans trekked out to Under the K Bridge Park in Greenpoint, Brooklyn, for the CBGB Festival. For nearly 33 years, CBGB was a symbol of punk's passion and persistence."
"It all started in 1973 when proprietor Hilly Kristal transformed his dive bar into a venue for Country, Bluegrass, Blues and Other Music for Uplifting Gormandizers - CBGB-OMFUG for short. Or, to the millions of punks who staggered under the entrance's iconic awning: "CBGBs." When Kristal's vision for the club as a country music mecca didn't materialize, he pivoted to the loud, abrasive sounds emerging from Bowery - even though the former Marine personally didn't care for it."
CBGB began in 1973 when Hilly Kristal converted a dive bar into a venue intended for Country, Bluegrass, Blues and Other Music for Uplifting Gormandizers (CBGB-OMFUG). The club shifted to loud, abrasive Bowery sounds and became an incubator for punk, launching bands like Television, Talking Heads, Blondie, Patti Smith and the Ramones. Kristal experimented with low-priced chili and all-ages hardcore matinees, and the venue retained a rough, sometimes unsanitary character. CBGB closed in 2006 and the storefront was replaced by a clothing boutique, while Kristal died in 2007 and the brand changed hands. The CBGB Festival in Brooklyn drew nearly 10,000 fans and presented a diverse lineup honoring punk's past, present and future.
Read at Los Angeles Times
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