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16_63 | governor in the Solid South era. More recently, it backed Democrat Ned McWherter in the 1986 and |
16_64 | 1990 gubernatorial elections and Phil Bredesen in 2006, when he won every county in the state. |
16_65 | See also
National Register of Historic Places listings in Unicoi County, Tennessee
References |
16_66 | External links
Official website
Unicoi County Chamber of Commerce
Unicoi County Schools
TNGenWeb |
16_67 | 1875 establishments in Tennessee
Populated places established in 1875 |
16_68 | Johnson City metropolitan area, Tennessee
Counties of Appalachia |
16_69 | Second Amendment sanctuaries in Tennessee |
17_0 | Glasslands Gallery (or simply Glasslands) was a music venue, dance club and art space in |
17_1 | Williamsburg, Brooklyn. Glasslands was founded by Brooke Baxter and Rolyn Hu in 2006, as a |
17_2 | relocation of Baxter’s earlier art space in the same building, Glass House Gallery. Hu and Baxter |
17_3 | held the lease on the Glasslands space until 2012, when they made a turn key sale to Rami Haykal |
17_4 | and Jake Rosenthal of PopGun presents, who had been managing bookings since 2009, and day-to-day |
17_5 | operations since 2010. PopGun owned the business and lease for two years, until the venue was |
17_6 | displaced to be converted into Vice Media‘s office headquarters. As a concert venue, Glasslands was |
17_7 | one of the longest-running of several 2000s independent creative venue spaces in the vicinity of |
17_8 | the Williamsburg waterfront, which included 285 KENT, Death By Audio, Secret Project Robot, Monster |
17_9 | Island Basement, B.P.M., Live With Animals Gallery, the Rock Star Bar, and many others. |
17_10 | Glass House Gallery and the beginning of Glasslands (2004–2006) |
17_11 | In 2004, multi-media artists Leviticus and Brooke Baxter, associated with the Freestyle Family, |
17_12 | founded Glass House Gallery at 38 South 1st St. The space featured a fluid and frequently changing |
17_13 | layout as well as free expressionistic painting, and hosted performance art and music initially |
17_14 | geared towards the founders’ friends in the Williamsburg creative community, but soon incorporating |
17_15 | rental events featuring touring musical acts booked by local promoters, principally DIY promoter |
17_16 | Todd P. As notoriety grew with increasingly higher-profile touring acts, Glass House began to |
17_17 | attract attention within Williamsburg’s music scene, and the venue became sought for local bookings |
17_18 | by bands, such as Grizzly Bear, Kyp Malone of TV on the Radio, Matt and Kim, Deerhunter, Adam |
17_19 | Green, Kimya Dawson, and Julianna Barwick. Chairlift‘s Caroline Polachek recalls, “It was a |
17_20 | graffiti-covered warehouse space without a stage, and people watched from a rickety loft balcony |
17_21 | that I was sure was going to collapse while Japanther was playing.” |
17_22 | Visual artists that exhibited at Glass House Gallery included Erica Magrey, Brooke Borg and DNA |
17_23 | (Aaron Almendral and Mariano Delgado). On Friday nights, the gallery held free “art jam hangouts” |
17_24 | where all who attended were encouraged to collaborate. In May 2006, Baxter partnered with musician |
17_25 | and artist Rolyn Hu to open The Glasslands Gallery at 289 Kent Ave, a larger partition of the same |
17_26 | warehouse complex where Glass House was located. A monthly lecture series, concerts, rotating art |
17_27 | installations, community fund-raising events, workshops and a free after-school program were all |
17_28 | part of space’s stated mission. The layout at the time included a “typewriter room”, a “painting |
17_29 | room” and the “lounge/conversation room.” Practice rooms for bands were also incorporated. |
17_30 | Brooke Baxter and Rolyn Hu open The Glasslands Gallery (2006–2011) |
17_31 | Glasslands was double in size to Glass House and more hospitable for performances, with better |
17_32 | sound and seating. The newly dedicated concert-hall venue operated “all ages” and without a liquor |
17_33 | license for its first year, with events booked by Todd P, as well as by Akwetey of the band Dragons |
17_34 | of Zynth. Todd P parted ways with Glasslands after a decision was made that the venue would become |
17_35 | "21+" for entry, following issuance of its liquor license . Some of the earliest performances |
17_36 | included Vampire Weekend, a secret show by the Yeah Yeah Yeahs, as well as emerging acts like |
17_37 | Pterodactyl, Bon Iver, MGMT and Dirty Projectors. DJ Jonathan Toubin would hold his New York Night |
17_38 | Train parties and Soul Clap Dance-Offs at the venue. The Village Voice dubbed Glasslands the “Best |
17_39 | Arts Venue Conjuring Avenue A in The 80s“. |
17_40 | In late 2009 Baxter and Hu opened a piano bar and restaurant called The Manhattan Inn in |
17_41 | Greenpoint. At this time, Rami Haykal and Jake Rosenthal of PopGun Presents were made the in-house |
17_42 | talent buying team at Glasslands. |
17_43 | 2011 saw major renovations, including the movement of the stage to the far back corner, along with |
17_44 | the removal of rehearsal spaces to allow for a greater audience capacity. During these early years |
17_45 | at Glasslands, the venue had a penchant for booking artists that promulgated an often noisy or |
17_46 | psychedelic brand of alternative pop, a sound that would become one of Williamsburg’s major |
17_47 | cultural exports. These acts included Yeasayer, Toro y Moi, Blood Orange, Chairlift, Tanlines, Twin |
17_48 | Shadow, Das Racist, Bear in Heaven, Titus Andronicus, Phantogram, Caribou, Jay Reatard, Wild |
17_49 | Nothing, Lemonade, Suckers, Keepaway, Phosphorescent, Passion Pit and Gang Gang Dance. In 2011, |
17_50 | Lana Del Rey played a secret practice gig under the moniker Queen Of Coney Island. |
17_51 | Fully functioning venue and club (2011–2014) |
17_52 | In the years prior to the transfer of ownership, PopGun increased the frequency of booked shows, |
17_53 | eventually reaching a point that Glasslands was booked with events virtually every night, save |
17_54 | holidays. In late 2010, DIY concert promoter Todd P acquired the commercial unit directly next door |
17_55 | to Glasslands and began booking all ages events there as 285 KENT. The neighboring venues competed |
17_56 | directly for bookings, with 285 KENT offering nearly double Glasslands’ standing capacity, as well |
17_57 | as challenging Glasslands’ 21+ entry policy . This competition inspired PogpGun to seek advantage |
17_58 | and upgrade Glasslands’ sound and facilities. A green room for artists and coat check were |
17_59 | installed as well. In 2012, ownership of Glasslands was transferred to PopGun’s Rosenthal and |
17_60 | Haykal. |
17_61 | Glasslands’ continual improvements and augmentations allowed for it to book some national touring |
17_62 | acts looking for an intimate space with some underground credibility. FKA twigs, Disclosure, WU |
17_63 | LYF, Angel Olsen, Charli XCX, Darkside, Grimes, Alt-J, Franz Ferdinand and Nils Frahm were some of |
17_64 | these acts. |
17_65 | Vashti Windish’s paper clouds installation, which had hung above the stage since 2008, was declared |
17_66 | by the New York Fire Department to be a fire hazard. It was replaced with a large array of |
17_67 | controllable LED tube clusters, designed by Noah Norman of Ancillary Magnet and built by the |
17_68 | Glasslands management and their friends. The clouds were memorialized in the design for Glasslands’ |
17_69 | first T-shirts, made available at the venue and online shortly after the installation’s removal. |
17_70 | In July 2013, Glasslands announced that they had upgraded to a Danley Labs Inc. sound system. Under |
17_71 | PopGun’s leadership, the venue took on more late-night parties with a DJ focus. These included |
17_72 | select dates with DJ Jonathan Toubin as well as a monthly residency with the neo-disco and house |
17_73 | collective Discovery. The themed Cat Face and Rebel Bingo nights found a home at Glasslands, as did |
17_74 | the Brooklyn Electronic Music Festival. The Adventure[s] team also put on a number of notable |
17_75 | parties including the season Robyn-themed party, an emo Valentine’s dance and a Twin Peaks-themed |
17_76 | Halloween party. Major electronic acts and DJs including Jon Hopkins, Baauer, Mister Saturday |
17_77 | Night, Omar S., and Sophie (PC Music) all made memorable stops. Bands that made repeated stops |
17_78 | during this period include Unknown Mortal Orchestra, How to Dress Well, Crocodiles, Lower Dens, Dum |
17_79 | Dum Girls, Le1f, The Range, DIIV, Trust, Shigeto, MØ, Hooray for Earth, Zambri, The Yellow Dogs, |
17_80 | King Krule, Light Asylum, THEESatisfaction, Cloud Nothings, Anamanaguchi, Kelela, Mon Khmer, Air |
17_81 | Waves, Majical Cloudz, Peelander-Z, Slow Magic, Mykki Blanco and Chrome Sparks. |
17_82 | Closure |
17_83 | After the sudden closure of neighboring venue 285 KENT in early 2014, as well as the announcement |
17_84 | that Glasslands’ building neighbor Death By Audio would also be closing, rumors circulated in the |
17_85 | press that Vice Media had its eye on the whole of the warehouse complex that contained Glasslands |
17_86 | for its new headquarters. Press accounts reported that the print magazine turned-conglomerate |
17_87 | received a large tax incentive from the State of New York to remain in New York City. Glasslands |
17_88 | announced on October 21 that New Year’s Eve 2014 would be its last night of operation. |
17_89 | While neither Glasslands nor Vice publicly stated the exact reason for the venue’s closure, the |
17_90 | announcement resulted in an outcry against the media company, with many alleging that it was |
17_91 | cannibalizing the alternative culture that allowed it to flourish. Others chalked it up to the |
17_92 | inevitable onset of gentrification, pointing out that the landmark Domino Sugar Refinery across the |
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