MSC Town Hall is a music-programming organization at Texas A&M University. The faculty advisor of Town Hall is Dave Salmon.
It was formed in 1951, the same year the Memorial Student Center facility was built. MSC Town Hall was one of the first student committees in the MSC organization.
In the 1970s, Town Hall successfully presented large-scale concerts on Friday nights of football game weekends at G. Rollie White Coliseum on Texas A&M's campus. Tickets were generally $3-$5 and artists such as Billy Joel, Johnny Cash, and the Beach Boys sold out the 8,000-capacity Coliseum.
In the early 1980s, Lyle Lovett, director of the Basement Committee, an organization responsible for hosting open mic and poetry readings, combined his committee with Town Hall. This new initiative of Town Hall, small programming, became known as Coffeehouse. Coffeehouse hosted grassroots concerts at Rumour's Deli in the MSC facility.
In 1997, at the behest of a Town Hall student the organization purchased its first P.A. system, and began hosting weekly outdoor concerts. These concerts became known as Lunchbox Concerts, a dual-form series that not only hosted established acts, but encouraged students at any level to perform.
In the fall of 2003, Town Hall turned away from large-concert promotions as a result of statewide budget cuts to public universities.