Allen Blairman. Andy Fite. Beaver Harris. Charles Bell. Dakota Staton. David Budway. David Izenzon. Eric Johnson. Eric Kloss. Eric Leeds. Erroll Garner. Gene Ludwig. George Benson. Horace Parlan. Jimmy Ponder. Joe Negri. Joe Pass. John Heard. Johnny Costa. Kenny Blake. Nathan Davis. Paul Chambers. Ray Brown. Ray Crawford. Roger Humphries. Ron Affif. Sean Jones. Slide Hampton. Sonny Clark. Sonny Dallas. Stanley Turrentine.
Alan Livingston. Andy Warhol and Velvet Underground. Art Rupe. Blue Duck Records. Bonedog Records. DiCesare-Engler Productions. Fee Bee Records. Frank DiLeo. Gateway Records.
Gus Greenlee. Harry Davis. Jeree Recording. Joe Hiller. Joe Rock. Joel Peresman. Joker Productions. Joni Foraker. Lance Jones. Lenny Litman. May Beegle. Nick Cenci. Rich Engler. Sellers McKee Hall. Steve Popovich. Tom Cossie. Tom Rooney. Bambola Social Club. Civic Arena Concert Schedule.
Civic Arena Concerts by Performer. Club Laga. Electric Banana. Fat City Lounge. Gene's Blues Bar. Graffiti Schedule. Heinz Hall. Hurricane Club. Leona Theater. Mancini's Lounge. MCG Jazz. Morry's Speakeasy. Musician's Club of Local Nick's Fat City. Pythian Temple-Savoy Ballroom. Rock Clubs. Savoy Ballroom - Elmore Theater. Staircase Lounge. Stanley Theater - Big Band Era. Stanley Theater - Rock Era. Stanley Theater Concerts. Syria Mosque Concerts.
The Decade. Three Rivers Stadium Concert Schedule. Dick Tady Orchestra. The Tamburitzans. Adam Wade. Bobby Vinton. Chico Marx. Chris Kirkpatrick. Dean Martin. Fred Kelly. Fred Rogers. Gene Kelly. Jackie Evancho. John Davidson. Josie Carey. Marvin Hamlisch. Perry Como. Phyllis Hyman. Shirley Jones. Stephen Foster.
Vaughn Monroe. Bob Babbitt. Chuck Jackson. Johnny Daye. Steals Brothers. Syreeta Wright. The Jaggerz. Wild Cherry. Bill Powell. Bob Livorio. Bob Mack. Chuck Brinkman. Clark Race. Frank Conrad. Jay Michael. Jimmy Roach and Steve Hansen.
John McGhan. Mad Mike. Mary Dee Dudley. Porky Chedwick. Sterling Yates. Terry Lee. Wilkens Amateur Hour. Affordable Floors. Bret Michaels. Brian Young. Bryan Bassett. Crack The Sky. David Werner. Diamond Reo. Donnie Iris. Gathering Field. Glass Harp. Granati Brothers. Mark Eddie. Modey Lemon. Norman Nardini. Paul Doucette. Paul Gilbert. Racket Squad - Fenways.
Reb Beach. Rick Witkowski. Rusted Root. Sweet Lightning. The Clarks. The Cynics. The Houserockers. The Igniters. The Rave-Ups. The Silencers. The Swamp Rats. Trent Reznor. Carl McVicker. Charles N Boyd. Matty Shiner. Pittsburgh Musical Institute. The show must go on, but under a roof. Mitchell and Dahlen K. The wings were to be made out of fabric-coated plastic attached to a cantilevered, steel arm.
Schenley Park was origianlly considered, but an Allegehny County judge upheld legal opposition to that site. Lawrence, came in the form of Renaissance I. Lawrence spear-headed a plan to give the CLO and Pittsburgh Hornets a new facility and to give Pittsburghers a multi-purpose facility. The result was the Civic Auditorium — later named the Civic Arena. The area was supposed to include a multipurpose arena, a family apartment complex, a motel, a parking garage and an art museum.
Garden party ends with new plan The City of Pittsburgh and Allegheny County formed the Public Auditorium Authority in March to assist in land purchases and the construction planning.
The Hockey News reported in the February 4, , edition that it could be possible for the Pittsburgh Hornets to resume play in The demolition of 1, structures began on May 31, to clear 95 acres for the new facility. Six of the sections could fold underneath two—in two and one-half minutes—making the Mellon Arena the world's first major indoor sports stadium with a retractable roof.
The stadium's capacity fluctuates depending on the event being hosted, but has increased due to additions between and The arena originally consisted only of lower bowl seating, but over time, upper decks were installed in the arena's "end zones" to increase capacity. The team played 20 seasons in the Gardens prior to its demolition, which made room for an apartment building.
The Arena opened on September 17, With the Arena available, the Hornets resumed play in the —62 season and went on to win the Calder Cup in the —67 season. As part of the NHL Expansion , the city of Pittsburgh was selected to host one of six new franchises. With a hockey seating capacity of 12,, Pittsburgh's Mellon Arena was eight seats over the NHL's minimum seating benchmark. Due to its outward appearance, the Arena was nicknamed "The Igloo" which led to the naming of the Penguins.
Andy Bathgate scored the Penguins's first goal in the arena. The Penguins won their first game at the Arena on October 21, when they became the first expansion team to beat an original NHL franchise—besting the Chicago Blackhawks 4—2.
Pittsburgh's Mario Lemieux scored three goals on his first three shots—the first coming 21 seconds into the game. He later scored a fourth goal and was named the game's Most Valuable Player. Games of the , and Stanley Cup Finals , which the Penguins won, were hosted at the arena, as were three games of the Finals.
0コメント