The Cavern Club is one of the most famous places in Liverpool, UK — or so I discovered earlier this year. It's particularly beloved among Beatles fans, and is known as the birthplace of the iconic ...
The documentary 'The Cavern Club: The Beat Goes On' revisits the iconic Liverpool club where The Beatles rose to fame and will premiere in Los Angeles on Wednesday as part of Britweek festivities. By ...
Every musical movement needs its breeding ground, and for the Merseybeat boom that birthed the Beatles, it was a former bomb shelter in the basement of a fruit warehouse. The Cavern Club, located at ...
Years before the underground Liverpudlian club would become synonymous with the Beatles, the Quarrymen made their Cavern Club debut on August 7, 1957. Led by John Lennon (Paul McCartney was away at ...
Ray McFall, who owned Liverpool’s Cavern Club during the period when the Beatles cut their teeth on its stage, has died at the age of 88. The cause of death has not yet been disclosed. As NME reports, ...
Rubber Soul, Sergeant Peppers, Strawberry Fields Cafe — the names lining businesses on Liverpool’s Mathew Street leave no doubt about where you are on the planet. This is Liverpool — home of The ...
Last week back in 1957, the most famous rock club in England opened in Liverpool. There was absolutely no rock and roll on the bill that night. The Cavern Club was originally opened to mimic the ...
Liverpool’s Cavern Club, best known as the launchpad for The Beatles, is in a fight for survival. The club used to host about 800,000 visitors a year, but it has been standing empty since the ...
The Cavern Club, the historic Liverpool venue where the Beatles played nearly 300 shows prior to the British Invasion, is in danger of permanently closing due to the coronavirus, club owners and local ...
LIVERPOOL - FEBRUARY 1961: Rock and roll band "The Beatles" performs onstage at the Cavern Club in February 1961 in Liverpool, England. (L-R) George Harrison, Paul McCartney, Pete Best, John Lennon.
Liverpool’s Cavern Club, best known as the launchpad for The Beatles, is in a fight for survival. The club used to host about 800,000 visitors a year, but it has been standing empty since the ...