- Ludlow Street
Ludlow Street runs between Houston and Division Street on the Lower East Side of the
New York City borough ofManhattan , an important cultural street rich with history.It is a destination street for musicians and music-lovers, and is heavily populated with fashion shops, art galleries, bars, restaurants, and clubs. Ludlow Street currently houses the performance venues Cake Shop, The Living Room and
Piano's , among its many other diversions.History
1960 - 1990
As far back as 1963
Tony Conrad ,Theatre of Eternal Music member, lived and worked at 56 Ludlow [Steven Watson, "Factory Made: Warhol and the Sixties", Pantheon, New York, 2003, p. 157] and in 1965Lou Reed ,John Cale andSterling Morrison ofThe Velvet Underground lived and recorded there.In the mid 1970s Gary Weis made some short films of
Taylor Mead talking to his cat in the kitchen of his Ludlow Street apartment called "Taylor Mead's Cat." [ [http://www.thelmagazine.com/3/11/NYCProfiles/nycprofiles.cfm] Dan Glass, "Taylor Mead, Superstar:The Life and Times of a Downtown Legend"]In the early 1980s Ludlow Street was well-known as a street where
no wave Colab artists lived. [Carlo McCormick , "The Downtown Book: The New York Art Scene, 1974–1984",Princeton University Press, 2006]In 1989 the
Beastie Boys used a photo of the southwest corner of Ludlow andRivington Street as the cover for their album "Paul's Boutique ". [ [http://www.gothamist.com/2006/04/19/nyc_album_art_p.php NYC Album Art: Paul's Boutique] , accessedApril 26 ,2007 . "According to the album, Paul's Boutique is inBrooklyn ...but we all know this photo was taken in theLower East Side . With a Paul's Boutique sign hanging up on the Lee's Sportswear storefront, the shot was taken at 99 Rivington Street, where Rivington and Ludlow intersect."]1990's
In the mid- to late 1990s, the increasing popularity of the area among
hipster s—driven out of the East Village by an invasion ofyuppie s—led to an upturn in activity along Ludlow Street, with several old establishments, such as corner delis (a.k.a. bodegas) closing shop to make way for bars, music venues such as the Ludlow Street Bar & Grill (a basement restaurant and music venue), and alternative theatres such as (before it became an empty lot), Piano's Theater (before it became a music venue and bar), and Todo Con Nada (before it became The Dark Room).Today
Since then it has become a small nightlife strip featuring bars and venues with a distinct subcultural flavor. Local institutions still present, including the bistro/cafe Pink Pony, the adjacent artist bar Max Fish,
Katz's Deli , which is one of the city's most famousdelicatessen s, Ludlow Street Guitars, and the Sombrero Mexican restaurant, better known to a generation of musicians as "The Hat."From south to north, Ludlow starts from Division Street, intersects Canal Street, Hester Street, Grand Street, Broome Street, Delancey Street, Rivington Street and Stanton Street, and ends at Houston Street.
References
Reference texts
*
Carlo McCormick , "The Downtown Book: The New York Art Scene, 1974–1984", Princeton University Press, 2006
* Alan Moore and Marc Miller, eds., "ABC No Rio Dinero: The Story of aLower East Side Art Gallery", Collaborative Projects, NY, 1985
*Steven Watson, "Factory Made: Warhol and the Sixties", Pantheon, New York, 2003
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