The Ritz (rock club)
The Ritz was a New York City rock club in the 1980s and early 1990s.
History
The Ritz was founded in 1980 by Jerry Brandt in the historic Webster Hall ballroom and concert space on 11th Street between Third and Fourth Avenues in the East Village neighborhood of New York City. The address was 119 East 11th Street. The Ritz focused primarily on live performances, often of newer acts, but also featured dancing. The Ritz was one of the first clubs to incorporate video screens into the club experience with a 30' screen and a projector which cost $120,000. MTV made its debut at The Ritz. In April 1989, The Ritz moved to the site of the former Studio 54 on 254 West 54th Street, where it was called "The New Ritz" and continued to host concerts for several years.[1] From 1990 onward it reverted to the name "The Ritz". The original 11th Street space is now known as Webster Hall.
MTV's "Live at The Ritz"
MTV aired a series of concerts called "Live at The Ritz" on Saturday nights in the 1980s. Performers included Guns N' Roses, Gene Loves Jezebel, the Saints, the Cult, Nik Kershaw, the Smithereens, Oingo Boingo, Julian Cope, Great White, Hoodoo Gurus, White Lion, Iggy Pop, Eurogliders, Blancmange,[2] and Simon Townshend.
Public Image Limited appearance
The club received national attention after an antagonistic performance by Public Image Limited on May 15, 1981.[3] They were a late substitution for Bow Wow Wow, who were originally scheduled to perform.[3] The band was more interested in creating performance art than giving a traditional concert; to this end, they appeared onstage deliberately obscured by a projection screen and played their records through the club's public address system while playing entirely different music onstage.[3] Taunted by lead singer John Lydon (formerly of the Sex Pistols), the Ritz's unhappy patrons rioted, throwing bottles and garbage cans, and pulling on the video screen that covered the front of the stage.[3][4][5]
Notable
- "Mommy, Can I Go Out & Kill Tonight", the only live track on the Misfits' album Walk Among Us, was recorded at The Ritz in 1981. Parts of Evilive were also recorded there in 1981.[6]
- Rick Derringer recorded a Ritz show in 1982, released in 2009 as Rick Derringer's Rock Spectacular: Live at The Ritz, New York 1982, featuring guests Ted Nugent, Tim Bogert, Karla DeVito and Southside Johnny.
- The Michael Stanley Band recorded the live album Live at the Ritz at The Ritz on September 26–27, 1983.[7]
- Bo Diddley recorded Live at The Ritz with Ronnie Wood in 1987.[8]
- The second disc of British metal band Venom's live double album, Eine kleine Nachtmusik, was recorded at The Ritz on April 4–5, 1986.[9]
- D.R.I. recorded Live at The Ritz on June 27, 1987.
- Guns N' Roses recorded their February 2, 1988, concert for a live video[10]
- The August 13, 1988, concert by Kiss was recorded and has been released several times on video, cd and vinyl[11]
- White Lion made a television recording at the club in 1988. This concert was released as the second disc of the 2007 compilation The Definitive Rock Collection.
- "Memories Can't Wait" from the Living Colour EP Biscuits was recorded live at the club on April 22, 1989.[12]
- Tin Machine (fronted by David Bowie) recorded a megamix video for their first album at the club, released in June 1989.[13]
- The first US show for Sepultura was at The Ritz opening for King Diamond on October 31, 1989.[14]
- Stormtroopers of Death recorded Live at Budokan (Stormtroopers of Death album) at The Ritz on March 21, 1992.[15]
References
- "Minor Musings: The Ritz – NYC!". October 13, 2012.
- Blancmange – Live at The Ritz 1985 – Taped from MTV on Betamax on YouTube
- "New York, Ritz, USA, May 15th, 1981 (Review and Setlist)". Retrieved August 18, 2021.
- http://www.furious.com/Perfect/pil.html Ed Caraballo's account of Pil @ The Ritz.
- https://www.webcitation.org/query?url=http://www.geocities.com/rstevus/pil2.html&date=2009-10-26+01:52:31 Rolling Stone review + other remiscensenses of Pil @ The Ritz.
- "Official Misfits Discography". Misfits.com. Retrieved August 18, 2021.
- Sarzo, Rudy (2017). Off the Rails (third edition). CreateSpace Publishing. ISBN 1-53743-746-1
- Pareles, Jon (November 28, 1987). "Pop: Bo Diddley Tour". The New York Times.
- "Venom – Eine Kleine Nachtmusik". Encyclopaedia Metallum. Retrieved September 14, 2011.
- "A Look Back at Guns N' Roses' Legendary Live Show at the Ritz in '88". InsideHook. Retrieved January 24, 2022.
- "Kiss – The Ritz on fire (Broadcast 1988) – (Vinyl LP) – musik". Ginza.se – Musik – Film – Retro (in Swedish). Retrieved January 24, 2022.
- Living Colour Rocks The Ritz. East Village Eye. December 1986. p 6.
- McLennan, Scott (June 3, 2019). "David Bowie & I: Socks, Sax & Sex Shops". Retrieved August 18, 2021.
- "Sepultura Tour Dates". metallipromo.com. Retrieved July 10, 2021.
- Bradley, Torreano. "Live at Budokan Review". AllMusic.com. Retrieved March 16, 2023.