Mill City Nights

Coordinates: 44°58′50″N 93°16′28″W / 44.98056°N 93.27444°W / 44.98056; -93.27444
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Mill City Nights
Map
Former namesThe Brick (2012)
Address111 5th St N
Minneapolis, MN 55403
Coordinates44°58′50″N 93°16′28″W / 44.98056°N 93.27444°W / 44.98056; -93.27444
OwnerAEG
Genre(s)music, concerts
Capacity1,200
OpenedMarch 19, 2012
ClosedNovember 30, 2016
Website
Venue Website

Mill City Nights (formerly known as The Brick) was a concert venue in downtown Minneapolis, Minnesota, United States, with a capacity of about 1200[1] that opened in 2012 and was operated by AEG Live.[2]

It had no affiliation with the Mill City Museum or Mill City Live. Many national acts that are too small to pack an entire stadium came to Mill City Nights, including Cole Swindell,[3] Eric Paslay,[4] and Dan + Shay. [5]

The venue had a partnership with AXS TV and several concerts were featured on AXSLive.[6] The first act was Seether who performed on October 16, 2012.[6][7]

The venue went out of business and closed its doors permanently on November 30, 2016,[8] citing the high cost of rent.[1] AEG is no longer operating the venue but there are reports of it reopening as MPLS Music Hall.[9]

Bars[edit]

There were three full-service bars located in Mill City Nights, with one being located on each level. The featured bar was The Nether Bar which is located in the basement. The Nether Bar could in itself be a separate venue, featuring live music for local up and coming bands, or could be used as a place for ticket holders to grab drinks before and after shows in the main room.[10]

MPLS Music Hall[edit]

In December of 2016, speculation ran wild as two acts were billed to appear at a mysterious new venue.[11] It began its first major run of shows in September of 2017, as Damian Marley took the stage.[12]

As of January 2, 2021 it is questionable that this place has been open since 2018, as its website is no longer up and its social media has not posted anything since 2018. As of 2022 Google Maps reports it to be permanently closed.

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b Boller, Jay. "Minneapolis concert venue Mill City Nights is closing | City Pages". City Pages. Retrieved 2018-04-03.
  2. ^ "Mill City Nights - Meet Minneapolis". Archived from the original on 2015-05-05.
  3. ^ "Tickets on sale: Cole Swindell at Mill City Nights in December – Twin Cities".
  4. ^ "The Big Gigs, March 25–30: Secret Stash Revue, Soul Asylum, Scotty McCreery - StarTribune.com".
  5. ^ "Country duo Dan + Shay at Mill City Nights on Thursday – Twin Cities".
  6. ^ a b "Mill City Nights Press Release" (PDF).
  7. ^ "Setlist.fm".
  8. ^ "Mill City Nights music club in downtown Minneapolis to close on Nov. 30". Star Tribune. Retrieved 2018-04-03.
  9. ^ Johnson, Cecilia. "Mill City Nights reopening as...Music Hall?". Local Current Blog | The Current from Minnesota Public Radio. Retrieved 2018-04-03.
  10. ^ "AEG Facilities - Theaters/Clubs - Mill City Nights".
  11. ^ Boller, Jay. "2 facts about Music Hall Minneapolis, the new venue apparently replacing Mill City Nights | City Pages". City Pages. Retrieved 2018-04-03.
  12. ^ Kamnetz, Darin. "Photographic proof Music Hall Minneapolis is a functioning venue | City Pages". City Pages. Retrieved 2018-04-03.

External links[edit]