976:). The financial ramifications of this ill-advised move endangers the venerable Carnegie Hall by stripping the corporation of its financial viability. This is because the Carnegie Hall Building was saved by recognizing the monetary value of the studio rental incomes and their ability to enable the Carnegie Hall Corporation to operate in the black even if no concert dates in the Hall proper could be had. The Carnegie Hall Building was in danger of demolition beginning in the late 1950s due to the announcement that the New York Philharmonic was moving all its concerts to Lincoln Center. When that happened, plans were being made to reduce the Carnegie Hall Building into a Kinney Parking Lot. At this point, Richard Schulze stepped in and opposed and prevented it from happening (keeping the issue alive in the press for a three year period and stopping the wrecking ball several times), writing a feasibility study and operating plan that enabled the building to be saved. These work products were given to Isaac Stern when Stern expressed grave doubt that anything could save the building. Stern had heard a recording made by Richard Schulze that outlined Schulze's operating plan and feasibility study. Upon receipt of Schulze's work, Stern utilized Schulze's ideas and financial projections in order to enable Albany to pass enabling legislation to save the building.
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apparent "ban" before, and given the large numbers of rock and rhythm & blues artists that appeared here, including Bill Haley and others before 1955, I find it highly unlikely that such a ban ever existed. One particularly potent example would be the appearance here in 1962 of Johnny Cash, whose drug problems were no secret by that point, and which would seemingly be cause to have invoked such a “ban” to prevent controversy (which would seem to be the point of banning certain acts or genres).
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for reasons of history!). Note this: Robert Simon, Jr., the owner of
Carnegie Hall from 1935 to 1960, has stated to us (as recently as last week) that there was absolutely no such “ban” in effect, ever. I think that for these reasons, references to this ban should be removed, since they create a false historical context for the 1964 Beatles concert.
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Decades ago, great numbers of young people in
America aspired to become successful concert pianists, violinists, etc. To "get to Carnegie Hall" was a common phrase that meant "to achieve a level of skill so fine as to produce an invitation to perform in Carnegie Hall." Young people were often told
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For GPS and car service reservation purposes, it would be useful to know the (entirely theoretical) street address ("house number") on West 57th Street. I called
Carnegie Hall and they would only give out the legal, Postal Service address of their business office lobby near the corner of West 56th
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If it is simply Sid making that claim, then I think this falls under the heading of hearsay, unless a second source can be located. There has always been a fairly "open door" policy here (and I say this with absolutely no intended bias -- if there indeed WAS such a ban, we'd like to know about it
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There were blues/R&B performers (Muddy Waters, for one), but not many "rock and roll" acts (depends upon how you draw that definition, and whether it really makes a big difference), but even if there were not any at all, it still doesn't prove there was an outright "ban." Any number of other
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What is the source for this claim of a ban on rock and roll performers (see quoted passage below)? Is it the footnoted
Schaffner book, or is it simply Sid Bernstein making this assertion within that book? I ask because I am one of the archivists at Carnegie Hall, and I have never heard of this
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As it stands the
History section is a mixture of physical history, ownership history and musical history. Each surely deserves its own sub-section? The musical history could certainly be developed and expanded, particularly with regard to African-American music. This
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factors (such as concert promotors simply believing the venue wasn't right for their acts; tour schedules; etc.) could account for the lack just as easily. It just seems to me that a claim of an outright ban is strong enough that it needs be substantiated.
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The demolition of the
Carnegie Hall Studios and the eviction of its artist tenants represents a cultural apostasy. It makes the work of Richard Schulze, the savior of the Carnegie Hall Building, meaningless. (For more information:
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For information on how
Richard Schulze saved the Carnegie Hall Building, a provides a vast historical archive and brings the researcher back to relive those exciting moments which enabled the Carnegie Hall Building to be saved.
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Street, 881 Seventh Avenue. This address is not the physical location of any of the three auditoriums to which patrons might drive or be dropped off. In that sense, the "Location" in the main page here is misleading.
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There is vandalism, shown by clicking on the Jazz show line at the top, featuring photos of two women. I do not know how it is done, or how to fix it. Perhaps some other editor can remove it.
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Quick edit made re: Spartk reference to joke = "How Do I Get To
Carnegie Hall was from the 2002 album "Lil' Beethoven", not 2006's "Hello Young Lovers" as had been listed.
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convinced
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NO mention of the controversies over the artists' studios or CH's trashing of archival & historical materials, furnishings, musical instruments etc
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So, to get the top level you take the lift and then climb 137 steps. Why is there such a huge gap between the top and penultimate level?
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could provide a lot of useful source material, especially from its timeline of significant concerts by
African-American performers.
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appeared at Carnegie Hall in 1955, in the late fifties and early sixties, the theater refused to allow rock acts like
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51 studios. Bernstein was one of the tenants. This should be made part of the article, but I lack time at the moment.
633:-related articles on Knowledge. If you would like to participate, please visit the project page, where you can join
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to delete these "External links modified" talk page sections if they want to de-clutter talk pages, but see the
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If you have discovered URLs which were erroneously considered dead by the bot, you can report them with
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So, the basis of the joke is that a simple request for directions is answered with a moral exhortation.
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1042:"The hall's employee who oversees props at the New York was paid $ 530,000 in salary and benefits..."
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on Knowledge. If you would like to participate, please visit the project page, where you can join
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on Knowledge. If you would like to participate, please visit the project page, where you can join
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on Knowledge. If you would like to participate, please visit the project page, where you can join
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before doing mass systematic removals. This message is updated dynamically through the template
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Easy: Can anyone identify a rock and roll act that played at the hall between 1955 and 1964?
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for writing and maintaining articles. To participate, you can edit this article or visit the
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How about adding that he built it because he felt a little "bad" that he sorta caused the
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If you found an error with any archives or the URLs themselves, you can fix them with
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What about Carnegie Hall in Dunfermline, why is this not documented on Knowledge...?
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906:. The ban on rock and roll concerts at Carnegie Hall was finally broken by the
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http://tps.cr.nps.gov/nhl/detail.cfm?ResourceId=387&ResourceType=Building
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Should the Main Hall be listed as just that, or as "Isaac Stern Auditorium"?
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We should probably get some pictures of the interior of the main hall.
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that they would never get to Carnegie Hall unless they practiced a lot.
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When you have finished reviewing my changes, please set the
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for additional information. I made the following changes:
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Knowledge:WikiProject National Register of Historic Places
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Template:WikiProject National Register of Historic Places
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or so I heard on History "The Men who Built America."
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A fact from this article was featured on Knowledge's
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735:Okay, I get the joke now. Thanks.
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637:and see a list of open tasks.
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847:—Preceding
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737:Courier new
692:Courier new
442:Jazz portal
58:May 5, 2024
54:May 5, 2022
50:May 5, 2015
46:May 5, 2012
42:May 5, 2010
38:May 5, 2008
36:section on
33:On this day
1316:Categories
1303:Report bug
991:References
978:Rheesmusic
894:"Although
825:Nodekeeper
812:Nodekeeper
801:story here
766:Dunfermlne
368:guidelines
1286:this tool
1279:this tool
1206:dead link
1131:Stagehand
1060:Vandalism
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28:Main Page
1292:Cheers.—
1139:contribs
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1038:Finances
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841:Pictures
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547:inactive
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1219:checked
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1182:my edit
1047:Syzygos
1014:History
947:Rhudson
908:Beatles
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772:Adw2000
667:on the
491:on the
298:on the
193:on the
80:B-class
30:in the
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