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The Mason Jar

Coordinates: 33°29′38″N 112°01′55″W / 33.494°N 112.032°W / 33.494; -112.032
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Mason Jar was a nightclub and music venue in Phoenix, Arizona. It featured rock music, alternative rock, punk rock, hip hop, and heavy metal in the 1980s, 1990s and 2000s. Many famous bands such as Nirvana, Rob Zombie, The Ramones, Joan Jett, Stone Temple Pilots, the Red Hot Chili Peppers, Pearl Jam, Tool, The Black Crowes, Los Lobos, Meat Puppets, and many others performed at the venue.[1]

Founder

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The Mason Jar was founded in 1979. Early Arizona acts included the Spiffs, Blue Shoes, Llory McDonald, and the Schoolboys (later to become Capitol Records recording act Icon). It was founded by Clyde Shields and then sold to Franco Gagliano after a couple of years in business. Gagliano is credited with growing the club and making the small venue a success with national touring bands. Gagliano, originally from Sicily, managed the club from inception until 2000. Gagliano was known for his pizzazz, personality, his clog shoes,[2] and his love-hate relationships with the bands that played at the Mason Jar.

Initial success

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Many bands came to the Mason Jar on their way to Sunset Strip in Hollywood, California. Some ran out of money, never making it to Los Angeles, while others simply liked Phoenix and decided to stay. Scores of bands played at the Mason Jar before they achieved commercial success, such as Tool, Los Lobos, Green Day, Kid Rock, Rage Against the Machine, Jane's Addiction, Red Hot Chili Peppers, and Guns N' Roses. Local bands such as Billy Clone and the Same, The Beat Angels, Burning Flamingos, The Jetzons, Surgical Steel, Flotsam and Jetsam, Icon, The Results and Sacred Reich also played there. Jason Newsted of Flotsam and Jetsam, who later became the bass player for Metallica, was a regular at the Mason Jar. The Manic Street Preachers were scheduled to play the final gig of their 1995 U.S. tour at the Mason Jar before the tour was cancelled following the disappearance of Richey Edwards.[3]

Resurgence

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The Mason Jar experienced a resurgence as top Phoenix live music venue with the start of the new millennium, when the club was bought by local businessman Michael Manfredi aka "Mick" in 2000. Mick gave The Mason Jar a badly needed facelift, a substantial sound system upgrade and a new contemporary list of rising stars to perform, such as Linkin Park, Disturbed, Papa Roach, Fall Out Boy, Jimmy Eat World, Opeth, 30 Seconds to Mars and many more. Mick's appetite for diversity brought The Mason Jar into new genres including country music with acts like David Allan Coe, Hank Williams III and Shooter Jennings. Mick honored The Mason Jar's roots by hosting acts like Megadeth, The Ramones, Rob Halford, Dishwalla, Frank Black, Vanilla Ice, Stephen Pearcy, Ice-T, Robby Krieger and many, many others.

The Mason Jar was a favorite launching ground of music industry executives like Jenna Adler of Creative Artist's Agency (Papa Roach, The Apex Theory), record labels like Sony and DreamWorks, management agencies like Sanctuary Music (Rob Halford), and of concert promoters like Danny Zelisko, owner of “Evening Star Productions” (later merged with Live Nation), Tom Lapenna and Wil Anderson of Lucky Man Concerts, Kim Larowe of 13th Floor Entertainment and many more.

On August 15, 2000 Linkin Park played their first live show with singer Chester Bennington at The Mason Jar, just two months before their debut record, Hybrid Theory.[4]

It was not uncommon to see famous artists, professional athletes and politicians at the Mason Jar. Artists like Sammy Hagar and Michael Anthony (Van Halen) would stop in when booked on tour through Phoenix. Local artists like Alice Cooper and Glen Campbell's children made their debut on stage at The Mason Jar.

The Mason Jar was often awarded "Top Club for Rock" by the readers of The Phoenix New Times. It gave music fans in Phoenix a chance to experience live bands the way clubgoers in Los Angeles and other major cities could.

Closing

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The Mason Jar closed for business on February 15, 2005, when Mick sold the license to an outside party that no longer operated as The Mason Jar. The Mason Jar experienced its busiest year ever in its last year of business (when Mick was owner), boasting over 30 bands per week and dozens of shows on sale at Ticketmaster every month.

In 2006 the club closed for remodeling and re-opened as a gay bar.[5]

On September 20, 2013 the building was used for the Legends Of The Mason Jar - One More Time.[6] event. Promoted by Glenn De Jongh, the night featured reunions of many past Mason Jar acts from the 1980s and 1990s. Acts included The Spiffs/Urge, Raven Payne, Schoolboys Again (with members of Icon, King Kobra and Lizzy Borden), Scratch & Sniff, Egomaniacs, Killer Pussy, Blue Shoes, Box Of Cherries/Einsteins & Scott Rowe. Longtime owner Franco Gagliano introduced the bands.

In 2014 the building was listed for sale[7] and in 2015 became a local musical venue once more when Stephen Chilton of Psyko Steve Presents re-opened it as The Rebel Lounge.[8] The first show was The Atlas Moth, Take Over and Destroy, and Gatecreeper. Rebel Lounge is a popular venue for emerging musical bands and DJs from all across America.

References

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  1. ^ "AMEHOF 2018 Inductee Bios". Arizona Music & Entertainment Hall Of Fame. 2018-03-06. Retrieved 2023-06-08.
  2. ^ Smith, Brian (23 March 2000). "Franco's Wild Years". Phoenix New Times. Retrieved 23 October 2019.
  3. ^ Richardson, Andy (January 1996). "The Search For Richey Manic". Vox.
  4. ^ "Linkin Park Footage has Surfaced from One of The Bands First Live Shows in 2000 [WATCH]". Music Mayhem Magazine. 2018-11-30. Retrieved 2019-07-02.
  5. ^ Rodgers, Larry (2005-03-02). "Mason Jar closed for remodeling, will reopen as gay bar".
  6. ^ "Legends Of The Mason Jar - One More Time". 2013-09-20.
  7. ^ Leatherman, Benjamin. "The Mason Jar Building is For Sale". Phoenix New Times. Retrieved 2023-12-28.
  8. ^ "Rebel Lounge opens in Phoenix's former Mason Jar". azcentral. Retrieved 2019-07-02.

33°29′38″N 112°01′55″W / 33.494°N 112.032°W / 33.494; -112.032