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Bottom of the Hill is a concert venue located at the corner of 17th and Missouri streets in the Potrero Hill district of San Francisco, California. [1] [2] [3] According to Rolling Stone, the Bottom of the Hill is the best place to hear live music in San Francisco (RS 813). [2]
97.3 KLLC San Francisco ; 97.7 KWAI Los Altos * 98.1 KISQ San Francisco ; 98.5 KUFX San Jose (Classic rock) 98.9 KSOL San Francisco (Regional Mexican) 99.1 KSQL Santa Cruz (Regional Mexican) 99.7 KMVQ-FM San Francisco (Contemporary hit radio) 100.3 KBRG San Jose ; 100.7 KVVZ San Rafael ; 101.3 KIOI San Francisco
KGMZ-FM (95.7 MHz, "95.7 The Game") is a sports radio station licensed to San Francisco, California, and serving the San Francisco Bay Area.The station is owned by Audacy, Inc., and broadcasts from studios on Battery Street (shared with CBS owned-and-operated station KPIX-TV, with whom KGMZ-FM's sister stations were formerly co-owned and located) in the North Beach section of San Francisco.
This is a list of theatres and live performance venues in San Francisco, California. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] For more information on theater in San Francisco, see Culture of San Francisco - Theater . This is a dynamic list and may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness.
Nightclubs in the San Francisco Bay Area (1 C, 4 P) Pages in category "Music venues in the San Francisco Bay Area" The following 46 pages are in this category, out of 46 total.
The Jerry Garcia Amphitheater is an outdoor concert venue located in McLaren Park in San Francisco, California, [2] [3] opened in 1971. [1] Its maximum capacity (as of 2022) is 1,200 people. [ 1 ] It is named after Jerry Garcia of the rock band Grateful Dead , [ 1 ] and is the site of the annual Jerry Day event, at which various musical groups ...
SAN FRANCISCO (KRON) — In the Bay Area, the place to be for fireworks on New Year’s Eve is along San Francisco’s waterfront. ... You can join KRON4’s Grant Lodes and Justine Waldman for ...
In July 1968, the San Francisco Theological Seminary filed to sell KXKX to the Bay Area Educational Television Association, owner of public television station KQED (channel 9). [7] The station returned to the air as KQED-FM in mid-1969, originally using the studios at 286 Divisadero Street inherited from the seminary. [ 7 ]