Knuckleheads Saloon

Knucklehead's Saloon
Knuckleheads

Knuckleheads Saloon
Location 2715 Rochester St,
Kansas City, MO
Type Concert Hall
Genre(s) Blues, Americana, Jazz, Roots, Gospel, Country
Built 1887
Opened 2001
Owner Frank & Mary Hicks
Website Knucklehead's

Knuckleheads Saloon is a music venue in Kansas City, Missouri. The facility is a complex of three stages - a large outdoor stage featuring a converted caboose to one side as a VIP seating area, a 220 seat indoor stage and a 50 seat lounge known as the "Retro Room". The last doubles as a blues music oriented church on Wednesday evenings when it is renamed the "Gospel Lounge". Live music can be presented on all three stages at once. The venue presents live music five nights of the week, Wednesday through Sunday, with occasional Tuesday concerts.

Contents

History

The original building was built in 1887 as a railroad boardinghouse,[1] across the street from the original location of early Kansas City amusement park Electric Park. A very active train track runs close by the outdoor stage - performers have had to become accustomed to train whistles blowing during shows.[2] Singer-songwriter Joe Ely was performing his song Boxcar on the outdoor stage when a train came by, blowing its whistle at the right point in the song. Ely said he had "...waited 20 years for a train to come by at the perfect timing".[1]

Knucklehead's Saloon is owned by Frank & Mary Hicks, who owned an auto body shop called Mid-City Collision Repair. They opened a Harley-Davidson motorcycle dealership across the street from Mid-City in 1997 called F.O.G. Cycles (an acronym for "Fucking Old Guys")[1], and sponsored street parties as a promotional tool, giving away free beer.[3] In 2001, Hicks obtained a liquor license and the bar opened as Knucklehead's Saloon in homage to a trio of his cycling friends, calling themselves The Three Stooges. In 2004, Hicks closed F.O.G. Cycles to concentrate on the club. Mid-City has a mural painted on the wall facing Knuckleheads featuring rock, blues and country icons Elvis Presley, Stevie Ray Vaughan and Hank Williams Sr.[1]

The location in the East Bottoms on Rochester Street, bordered on the east by Montgall Ave, on the east by the North Chestnut Trafficway overpass and the south by railroad tracks can be difficult to find. The entire East Bottoms area is separated from Front Street and the highway system on the north by five very active sets of train tracks. North Chestnut Trafficway from the south [4] and Guinotte Ave from the west[5] are generally quicker as both routes feature a bridge over the train tracks.

Performers

Zydeco band Chubby Carrier and the Bayou Swamp Band recorded their live album Live at Knuckleheads, Kansas City and an accompanying DVD in 2007, as did Cadillac Flambe in 2010.[6]

The venue hosts several hundred performers every year, with concerts five nights a week, with two or three different stages operating in a single night.

National acts who have played Knuckleheads include Leon Russell, Edgar Winter and his brother Johnny Winter, Ray Price, Billy Joe Shaver, Dale Watson, Kinky Friedman, Rodney Crowell and David Lindley.

Advance tickets are sold for concerts by most of the national and international acts playing the venue[7] via eTix.[8]

Gospel Lounge

Reverend Carl Butler of the New Song Christian Fellowship church started holding church services in 2009 on Wednesday nights in the smallest of Knuckleheads' three performance spaces. They are intended to be for those who work late on Saturday nights, what Butler describes as "a church geared toward service-industry people."[9] Butler is a guitarist and recovering drug abuser and mixes music and preaching, playing "...everything from Merle Haggard to Motown".[10]

Jam sessions

The venue hosts no-cover open jams three days of the week, Saturday and Sunday afternoons and Monday evenings, allowing amateur musicians to play on stage with professionals.

Facilities

The outdoor stage is equipped with a 40 channel mixing board, the indoor stage has a slightly smaller 36 channel board and the Retro Room/Gospel Lounge has a 16 channel board.

The venue has television screens and projectors in every public and performer area to present what is happening on the various stages, or an in-house calendar of upcoming events. Each stage has three cameras feeding through a switch to a NewTek Tricaster video mixer that drives the in-house video and an optional UStream web stream.

Honors

Knuckleheads was given the Blues Foundation's "Keeping Blues Alive" award as Best Blues Club in 2008, calling it "...the place to see live Blues in Kansas City" and "...a premier stop for Blues artists traveling through the Midwest".[11]

Starting in 2005, it has won Best Blues Club[12] from the readers of the Kansas City alternative paper The Pitch, and has won that award for each of the following six years. Bill Brownlee of the Kansas City Star, in a review of a concert by Leon Russell, said "Knuckleheads is Kansas City's premier roots music venue of the last 30 years."[13]

References

  1. ^ a b c d "Knuckleheads, Frank Hicks' East Bottoms shrine to roots music, takes off". http://www.pitch.com/2010-09-23/news/knuckleheads-frank-hicks/. Retrieved 2011-02-17. 
  2. ^ "Rev Peyton's Big Damn Band - That Train Song with real train!". http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4-ppYEzm1Ss. Retrieved 2011-02-17. 
  3. ^ "Bike Night Reviews". cycleconnections.com. http://www.cycleconnections.com/articledetail.asp?TypeID=1&ID=123. Retrieved 2011-02-18. 
  4. ^ "Google Map directions from Downtown". Google Maps. http://maps.google.com/maps?f=d&source=s_d&saddr=10th+and+Main,+Kansas+City,+MO&daddr=39.11235,-94.54819+to:39.1242452,-94.5474008+to:2715+Rochester+Street,+Kansas+City,+MO+64120-1514+%28Knuckleheads+Saloon%29&hl=en&geocode=FVynVAId7sZc-ik_tOafYPDAhzHMTtS5r_R5Pw%3BFZ7OVAIdIk9d-ilxeAlKYvrAhzEmfxv7PxZQzg%3BFRX9VAIdOFJd-ikxXPMSbPrAhzHNuP5SFL_g2A%3BFcLuVAIdO01d-iHQfmoCzx3L9SlnDe7hbvrAhzEelspQIXg8VQ&mra=dpe&mrcr=0&mrsp=2&sz=15&via=1,2&sll=39.11269,-94.565795&sspn=0.026739,0.066047&ie=UTF8&t=h&z=15. Retrieved 9 March 2011. 
  5. ^ "Google Map Directions from City Market". Google Maps. http://maps.google.com/maps?f=d&source=s_d&saddr=10th+and+Main,+Kansas+City,+MO&daddr=39.1186565,-94.5494188+to:2715+Rochester+Street,+Kansas+City,+MO+64120-1514+%28Knuckleheads+Saloon%29&hl=en&geocode=FVynVAId7sZc-ik_tOafYPDAhzHMTtS5r_R5Pw%3BFUDnVAIdVkpd-imd5j1xb_rAhzFKY2rJdeAzCA%3BFcLuVAIdO01d-iHQfmoCzx3L9SlnDe7hbvrAhzEelspQIXg8VQ&mra=dvme&mrcr=0&mrsp=1&sz=15&via=1&sll=39.115478,-94.564691&sspn=0.026737,0.066047&ie=UTF8&t=h&z=15. Retrieved 9 March 2011. 
  6. ^ "Live at Knucklehead's". CD Baby. http://www.cdbaby.com/cd/CadillacFlambe. Retrieved 25 April 2011. 
  7. ^ "Knuckleheads tour dates". Pollstar. http://www.pollstar.com/resultsVenue.aspx?ID=45914&SortBy=Date. Retrieved 2011-03-07. 
  8. ^ "Knuckleheads Saloon tickets". ETix. http://www.etix.com/ticket/online/venueSearch.jsp?venue_id=3600&cobrand=knuckleheadskc&listAll=true. Retrieved 2011-03-07. 
  9. ^ Anderson, Berry (May 21, 2009). "Blues Caller: Wednesday Night Honky Tonk Gospel". The Pitch. http://blogs.pitch.com/wayward/2009/05/blues_caller_wednesday_night_honky_tonk_gospel.php. 
  10. ^ Chapman, Bev (February 9, 2011). "KC Tavern Rocks With God". KMBC-TV. http://www.kmbc.com/news/26802060/detail.html. Retrieved 2011-02-18. 
  11. ^ "2008 Keeping the Blues Alive Awards". http://www.blues.org/kba/past.php?YearId=31. Retrieved 2011-02-21. 
  12. ^ "Best Blues Club - 2005, Knuckleheads Saloon". http://www.pitch.com/bestof/2005/award/best-blues-club-21956/. Retrieved 2011-02-18. 
  13. ^ Brownlee, Bill (2010-09-18). "Leon Russell’s versatility on full display at Knuckleheads". The Kansas City Star: p. C2.