Where is the Best Blues Club in Chicago, Illinois?
We checked out the Joint half of the Reggie’s complex on “Rockabilly Tursday.” The ambience is Vintage Music Roadhouse, with high back-in-time authenticity. Brick walls are lined with old concert posters and other memorabilia, including an amusing row of old 8-tracks nailed up over the bathrooms. We didn’t expect much of the food and drink since the “special” was $3 grilled cheese, so we were pleasantly surprised at an extensive and well-chosen beer selection, and a decent wine list. Later on we got to choose from 9 different bourbons, including rarely-seen Bulleit.We had an intriguing chili, with a number of bean types, a thick chunk of spicy sausage plunked in the middle, and a smoky heat that crept up and warmed us without overpowering. Generous quesadillas came with a perky salsa. The base price was fair on food and brews. Service was top-rate. We were a little suprised, when the bill came, at upcharges for chicken in the quesadillas and $9 tags on the bourbon — steep when
Hello everyone, this is my first time writing a review but anyway my 1st time every going to green dolphin street was this past Friday and I had so so so much fun! I could say this was my 1st time every enjoying myself to the fullest going to a club. I didn’t know it was actually a restaurant until reading the other reviews but I went after the restaurant hrs were over but the atmosphere was excellent, it was spacious through out the club and there were about 5 bars and 3 different areas of the club played different music so the atmosphere was never boring. The main dance floor did get kind of extra crowded but it was still fun and they even opened up the VIP area for everyone. And people don’t take forever to show up, there was a line out the door @ 11:30 when I arrived and it stays open til 4 AM. I would recommend anyone to go to this club on a FRIDAY night if you want to have a good time, young or middle-aged, and don’t have to worry about it being super crowded, rude people or
The great famous photo of the Muddy Waters Band jamming with the Rolling Stones was actually taken at Richard Harding’s club,”The Quiet Knight”, not ‘The Checkerboard”. The Quiet Knight, by this time, had moved from its original and long-time “Old Town” home on North Wells Street to its last , and relatively abrupt, stay on West Belmont Avenue.
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