The Bowery Presents

Bowery Presents
Formation 1994
Location
Founders
Michael Swier and John Moore
Website http://www.bowerypresents.com/

The Bowery Presents is a concert promotion and venue management organization that runs multiple venues in New York City, Boston, Philadelphia, Atlanta, and Maine. Venue capacities range from 250 people to 20,000 people. The organization started with only a small club (The Mercury Lounge) on Manhattan's Lower East Side in 1993 and gradually developed a new market for indie rock concerts for new middle-class populations in Manhattan and Williamsburg, Brooklyn, during the 1990s and 2000s, and in the 2010s increasingly also tourists and a wider area of New Jersey and Brooklyn.[1]

History

The business evolution of The Bowery Presents:

Description

Bowery Ballroom, Webster Hall, and Music Hall of Williamsburg are widely appreciated for their excellent acoustics and for their historical aura. The buildings were constructed long before the gentrification process that shaped the outlook of the contemporary concert culture of mainstream indie rock at these venues and the concert market developed by The Bowery Presents, and the historical dimension of those venues is valuable to audiences and artists, both on the level of sensory pleasure but also on the level of authenticity in relation to the urban experience and the relatively retrospective indie rock.

The company was founded in 1993 by Michael Swier. In 2006, Bowery Presents partnered with former LiveNation CEO Jim Glancy,[2] and began to expand to larger venues in New York such as Hammerstein Ballroom, and Madison Square Garden.[3]

From 2010, the company began expanding to other places.

Venues

New York

Bowery Boston

Bowery Presents moved to Boston, MA in April 2010 when the company signed a long-term deal with The Royale to be the sole presenter of live music at the nightclub/music venue. Bowery opened a small office in Boston to run the venue and to book events for larger spaces.[6] Since 2010, Bowery has opened The Sinclair, and hired the two promoters of TT the Bear's and Great Scott.[7] The promoters work in conjunction with Bowery Presents to bring events to Great Scott and TT the Bear's, as well as The Royale and The Sinclair.[8]

Others

References

  1. Holt, F. 2013. "Rock Clubs and Gentrification in New York City: The Case of The Bowery Presents." IASPM@Journal, special issue on Performance, summer 2013 (open source publication)
  2. 1 2 "The House That the Bowery Boys Built | NYPress.com – New York's essential guide to culture, arts, politics, news and more". NYPress.com. 2007-11-28. Retrieved 2012-11-30.
  3. 1 2 Sisario, Ben (2007-06-07). "Bowery Presents – Concert Industry – Music – New York Times". Nytimes.com. Retrieved 2012-11-30.
  4. Sisario, Ben (2007-08-30). "Music Hall of Williamsburg – - New York Times". Nytimes.com. Retrieved 2012-11-30.
  5. "TERMINAL 5 = new, big Bowery Presents venue (M.I.A., Decemberists, National, Justice, Ween...)". Brooklynvegan.com. 2007-08-14. Retrieved 2012-11-30.
  6. 1 2 Sisario, Ben (2010-03-09). "The Bowery in Boston". The New York Times.
  7. – Brooklyn Vegan
  8. Bowery Presents Expands In Boston Hires Carl Lavin and Josh Smith of CQ Presents-The Phoenix
  9. Bowery announces the Sinclair: Harvard Square's 525-person rock club + 104-seat Michael Schlow restaurant-The Phoenix —
  10. -Boston.com
  11. – Sonic Bids
  12. "DAVID K. O’NEIL | International Market Consultant". Davidkoneil.com. 2011-01-29. Retrieved 2014-05-28.
  13. "Union Transfer: New concert venue on Spring Garden Street opens | philadelphiaheights". Philadelphiaheights.wordpress.com. 2011-09-28. Retrieved 2014-05-28.
  14. – R5 Productions
  15. – Who Kidnapped The State?
  16. Zema, Kegan (2011-01-12). "Guide to The State Theatre – The Maine Campus". Mainecampus.com. Retrieved 2012-11-30.

External links

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