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Mud Island Amphitheater is a 5,000-seat concrete outdoor amphitheater located on Mud Island, a peninsula in Memphis, Tennessee. [1] The structure has been used for concerts and shows since it was built in 1982. [1] A few artists that have performed at Mud Island Amphitheater include Bob Dylan, Journey, Eric Clapton, Heart and Peter Frampton. [2]
KJMS (101.1 FM) is an urban adult contemporary radio station in Memphis Tennessee, and serving the Mid-South, area, owned by iHeartMedia, Inc. The station's studios are located in southeast Memphis, and the transmitter site is in north Memphis. KJMS broadcasts in HD. [2]
It hosts comedians, [2] stage plays and children's theater, [3] ballet, [4] beauty pageants, [5] concerts, [6] and more. [1] It is home to the Memphis Symphony Orchestra. [7] It has previously hosted the Memphis mayor's swearing in ceremony, [8] the Memphis Music Hall of Fame ceremony, [9] and the Miss United States pageant. [10]
No city in the world packs as much musical history as Memphis. You can experience much of that history by visiting these five music museums. Exploring Memphis' music history: 5 museums you should ...
MEMPHIS CONCERTS: ZZ Top, Lynyrd Skynyrd headed to Southaven as part of 'The Sharp Dressed Simple Man Tour' Adam Sandler: Nov. 16, FedExForum Adam Sandler will headline FedExForum on Nov. 16.
The building opened as the Memphis Auditorium and Market House and was renamed for Memphis Chamber of Commerce President Robert R. Ellis after his death in 1930. [ 1 ] The auditorium was segregated and had a separate entrance and balcony for black patrons, [ 2 ] and in 1945 a performance of Annie, Get Your Gun did not go ahead because the cast ...
In May 2022, the Memphis and Shelby County Land use and Control Board approved plans to convert the site into a 126-unit apartment building. Parkview was built in 1923 as a 165-room apartment hotel.
Construction of the facility began on April 15, 1963. [5] From its opening in October 1964, the Coliseum was the first racially desegregated facility in Memphis. [5] Unlike most facilities in Memphis, which largely hesitated to integrate following the 1963 Watson v, United States U.S. Supreme Court case regarding local segregation, [5] and which was also argued two days after construction ...