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King Mojo : ウィキペディア英語版
King Mojo Club

The King Mojo Club, often known as the Mojo, was a nightclub in Sheffield, South Yorkshire, England located at 555 Pitsmoor Road, that operated between 1964 and 1967.
Peter Stringfellow and his brothers (One being Geoffrey, who was the brains behind the club) had been running the Black Cat Club in the city, which proved a success, Elsie Stringfellow ( Geoff and Peters mum took the money on the doors and Geoffs wife Carole served coffee ) In 1964, they opened a new venture, the King Mojo Club, in a converted house on Pitsmoor Road to the north of the city centre.〔"(Profiles: Peter Stringfellow )", ''BBC News'', 19 June 2008〕 The house had recently served as Dey's School of Ballroom Dancing and benefited from a sprung dance floor.〔Nikky Wilson, "(Big names at the King Mojo Club )", ''Burngreave Messenger'', February 2007〕 The club never received a drinks license, but did have a coffee bar.〔
The club quickly became a centre of the northern soul scene, with popular American acts such as Wilson Pickett (backed by Reg Dwight's Bluesology), Stevie Wonder, Ike and Tina Turner,〔 and Geno Washington playing.〔 It also hosted Edwin Starr's first UK gig. Don Covay and The Goodtimers also appeared
Stringfellow experimented with a records-only night on Tuesdays, then an original concept. He advertised the list of records which he would play in advance in the local newspaper.〔"(Record Doctor: Peter Stringfellow )", ''The Observer'', 23 April 2006〕
The club hosted up and coming live acts, including Pink Floyd and The Who. The Small Faces played their first gig outside London at the Mojo, and The Kinks worked out the arrangement of "All Day and All of the Night" while at the club.
The Mojo Club was also known for its art. Its walls were decorated by Dave Manvell and Paul Norton in a pop art style, Stringfellow himself painting African warriors dancing.〔Martin Dawes, "(Art's psychedelic charm )", ''The Star'', 22 October 2008〕 Colin Duffield designed innovative posters for the club, later using his skills to produce a wide range of posters for other local venues.〔"(Mojo Is Coming! )", Sheffield Children's Hospital, 15 October 2008〕
In 1967, Stringfellow along with his brother Geoffrey decided to refocus the club on psychedelic music, renamed it the "Beautiful King Mojo", and redecorated it accordingly.〔"(1967: The summer of love )", ''The Independent'', 5 May 2007〕 they booked Jimi Hendrix, who played despite a complaint about drug use. The Mojo also received complaints about noise, and its license was revoked later in the year. It was converted into a bingo club and was demolished in the 1980s.〔 As a stopgap before their new club "The Penthouse" opened, Pete and Geoff ran Mojo nights in the basement ballroom at the city hall.This was a much bigger venue than the old club with a proper stage. Pete played records an introduced live acts including Johnny Johnson and the Bandwagon and Martha and The Vandellas. The Monday club night after Otis Redding's death in December 1967 he played Redding's songs virtually all evening.
==References==


抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「King Mojo Club」の詳細全文を読む



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