SOHO SOHO SOHO A quick guide around our nbrhood Set in the centre of London in a quadrant with its corners marked by the tube stations at Piccadilly, Leicester Square, Oxford Circus and Tottenham Court Road, it’s a far cry from the farmland in the Middle of Ages. The urban development in the 17th and 18th century saw the area become the fashionable home and playground for wealthy aristocrats. By the mid nineteenth century, the Aristocrats had shot off west to Mayfair and the area soon filled up with prostitutes (or rather they just stayed where they were), music halls and theatres. Come the twentieth century and the maze of streets was home to eateries, drinking dens and clubs- The notorious 43 Club on Gerrard Street- closed down when the owner, Kate Meyrick was jailed in the 20’s, the wave of Italian cafés and coffee shops with the beatnik crowd, Ronnie Scotts Jazz Club on Gerrard Street before it moved to Frith Street, the 2is club on Old Compton Street -the birthplace of British Rock N Roll. The sixties saw the sex industry take off with cinemas, private clubs and Raymond’s Revue Bar. In the northern part of Soho, Marlborough Street Magistrates Court took on the mantle of the court of the stars. Appearances from the likes of Mick Jagger, Keith Richards was a “ tradition” started by Oscar Wilde and continued in later years by Francis Bacon, John Lennon and Johnny Rotten. The seventies see the recording industry going big in Soho. Trident Studios listed The Beatles, Bowie, the Stones and Soft Cell amongst a never-ending list of artists recording. Berwick Street Studios (beneath the Underground store) welcomed Bowie, The Specials and the Sex Pistols. The vinyl stores an extension of the recording industry spread along Berwick Street and nearby streets. See comments for the full text #undergroundshoes #underground_halfmoon #undergroundlondon #undergroundcreeper #thecreeper

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アンダーグラウンドのインスタグラム(resul80k2) - 10月9日 18時00分


SOHO SOHO SOHO
A quick guide around our nbrhood
Set in the centre of London in a quadrant with its corners marked by the tube stations at Piccadilly, Leicester Square, Oxford Circus and Tottenham Court Road, it’s a far cry from the farmland in the Middle of Ages.
The urban development in the 17th and 18th century saw the area become the fashionable home and playground for wealthy aristocrats. By the mid nineteenth century, the Aristocrats had shot off west to Mayfair and the area soon filled up with prostitutes (or rather they just stayed where they were), music halls and theatres.
Come the twentieth century and the maze of streets was home to eateries, drinking dens and clubs- The notorious 43 Club on Gerrard Street- closed down when the owner, Kate Meyrick was jailed in the 20’s, the wave of Italian cafés and coffee shops with the beatnik crowd, Ronnie Scotts Jazz Club on Gerrard Street before it moved to Frith Street, the 2is club on Old Compton Street -the birthplace of British Rock N Roll.
The sixties saw the sex industry take off with cinemas, private clubs and Raymond’s Revue Bar. In the northern part of Soho, Marlborough Street Magistrates Court took on the mantle of the court of the stars. Appearances from the likes of Mick Jagger, Keith Richards was a “ tradition” started by Oscar Wilde and continued in later years by Francis Bacon, John Lennon and Johnny Rotten.
The seventies see the recording industry going big in Soho. Trident Studios listed The Beatles, Bowie, the Stones and Soft Cell amongst a never-ending list of artists recording. Berwick Street Studios (beneath the Underground store) welcomed Bowie, The Specials and the Sex Pistols. The vinyl stores an extension of the recording industry spread along Berwick Street and nearby streets.

See comments for the full text #undergroundshoes #underground_halfmoon #undergroundlondon #undergroundcreeper #thecreeper


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