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The Kashmir Klub was a unique, non-profit making, live music club housed in the basement of a Restaurant and Bar called "Fabrizio" at the "Baker and Oven" located at No 6 Nottingham Place, central London, England. It was open from 1997 to 2003. The club was started in November 1997 by musician Tony Moore to provide a different approach to discovering, developing and promoting the best signed and unsigned artists available, and to create a "fertile, creative and spontaneous" atmosphere. The name was inspired by the Led Zeppelin track "Kashmir". Moore loved the track and also the band. He said "It seemed to me that Led Zeppelin covered nearly every genre of music in their time, from Rock to Acoustic. So I thought "The Kashmir Klub" would be perfect." == Concept == The principles involved were simple but radically different from anything that had been done before. There was no money involved. No one paid an entrance fee, no artists were paid for their performance, or had to pay to play, and the organisers were not paid a wage for doing it. The equipment was first class and the sound was almost Hi-Fi in quality. The equipment in the club was sponsored and given by commercial companies. These included Allen and Heath (mixing desk) - Celestion (speakers) - LA Audio (signal processing) - Focusrite - Mad Manufacturing (lighting) - Yamaha (digital grand piano and Stage Custom drum kit) - Line 6 (Flextone combo) - Sennheiser (microphones) MC2 (power amps) and others. The audience were part of the show. Everyone was made to feel welcome and involved. There was also a strict "No talking during the music" policy which, unlike most venues, was completely successful. 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「The Kashmir Klub」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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