Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q20054108> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 94 of
94
with 100 triples per page.
- Q20054108 subject Q16806772.
- Q20054108 subject Q7464031.
- Q20054108 subject Q8154017.
- Q20054108 subject Q8178215.
- Q20054108 subject Q8302281.
- Q20054108 subject Q8302286.
- Q20054108 subject Q8373179.
- Q20054108 subject Q9461565.
- Q20054108 abstract "The Four Aces Club was a pioneering music and recreational space in Dalston, London, that in the 1960s and '70s was one of the first venues to play black music in Britain, being credited with a significant "role in the evolution of reggae into dance music, from ska, to rocksteady, to dub, to lovers, to dancehall and the evolution of jungle." A host of notable Afro-Caribbean musicians appeared at the Four Aces – often referred to as "the jewel in Dalston's crown" – as well as soul and R&B artists, its clientele over the years including stars such as Bob Marley, Stevie Wonder and Jimmy Cliff. With the Thatcher era came more divisionist politics; racial tensions built in the area and the club was a target for police raids. In the early 1990s, its character changed as it became home to the early indoor "rave scene", featuring drum & bass and acid house, and appealing to a new, predominantly white audience, under the name Labrynth, where The Prodigy made their first live public appearance.It was closed in 1997, and eventually Hackney Council exercised the right to a compulsory re-possession of the premises. Despite an active campaign to save the building it was demolished in 2007 to make way for three residential tower blocks, in the new Dalston Square development, with the new Dalston Junction overground railway station aligning with urban regeneration plans for East London in the build-up to the 2012 Olympics. Subsequent campaigns took place putting pressure on the council "to prevent the eradication of monuments which hold the memory of Black history and the story of multi-racial political solidarity in the borough", in particular the successful petition to retain the name of C. L. R. James on the relocated Dalston library known since 1985 as "The CLR James Library", which resulted in the new library on the redeveloped site being opened as the "Dalston C.L.R. James Library" in 2012.".
- Q20054108 wikiPageExternalLink history-of-dalston.
- Q20054108 wikiPageExternalLink 4-aces-club.
- Q20054108 wikiPageExternalLink object9642.
- Q20054108 wikiPageExternalLink dalston-time-travel-back-to-the-four-aces.
- Q20054108 wikiPageExternalLink dereliction-and-beyondthen-and-now-photos.html.
- Q20054108 wikiPageExternalLink review_f_legacy_in_the_dust_08.html.
- Q20054108 wikiPageExternalLink legacy-dust-story-four-aces.
- Q20054108 wikiPageExternalLink the-four-aces-club.
- Q20054108 wikiPageExternalLink sir-coxsone-outernational-4.
- Q20054108 wikiPageExternalLink club-labyrinth-newton-dunbar-interview.
- Q20054108 wikiPageExternalLink watch?v=JVickaW36IM.
- Q20054108 wikiPageExternalLink watch?v=co7i7Gr7bt0.
- Q20054108 wikiPageWikiLink Q109063.
- Q20054108 wikiPageWikiLink Q1102161.
- Q20054108 wikiPageWikiLink Q1201529.
- Q20054108 wikiPageWikiLink Q125603.
- Q20054108 wikiPageWikiLink Q128121.
- Q20054108 wikiPageWikiLink Q131272.
- Q20054108 wikiPageWikiLink Q16806772.
- Q20054108 wikiPageWikiLink Q16980001.
- Q20054108 wikiPageWikiLink Q1754873.
- Q20054108 wikiPageWikiLink Q179694.
- Q20054108 wikiPageWikiLink Q1872505.
- Q20054108 wikiPageWikiLink Q18748758.
- Q20054108 wikiPageWikiLink Q188994.
- Q20054108 wikiPageWikiLink Q19057.
- Q20054108 wikiPageWikiLink Q205679.
- Q20054108 wikiPageWikiLink Q212688.
- Q20054108 wikiPageWikiLink Q215026.
- Q20054108 wikiPageWikiLink Q239202.
- Q20054108 wikiPageWikiLink Q239476.
- Q20054108 wikiPageWikiLink Q2499366.
- Q20054108 wikiPageWikiLink Q286596.
- Q20054108 wikiPageWikiLink Q287514.
- Q20054108 wikiPageWikiLink Q3017545.
- Q20054108 wikiPageWikiLink Q310052.
- Q20054108 wikiPageWikiLink Q3175896.
- Q20054108 wikiPageWikiLink Q333598.
- Q20054108 wikiPageWikiLink Q341364.
- Q20054108 wikiPageWikiLink Q356140.
- Q20054108 wikiPageWikiLink Q356745.
- Q20054108 wikiPageWikiLink Q389435.
- Q20054108 wikiPageWikiLink Q392.
- Q20054108 wikiPageWikiLink Q409.
- Q20054108 wikiPageWikiLink Q441161.
- Q20054108 wikiPageWikiLink Q443886.
- Q20054108 wikiPageWikiLink Q445862.
- Q20054108 wikiPageWikiLink Q45981.
- Q20054108 wikiPageWikiLink Q463744.
- Q20054108 wikiPageWikiLink Q474027.
- Q20054108 wikiPageWikiLink Q530886.
- Q20054108 wikiPageWikiLink Q542292.
- Q20054108 wikiPageWikiLink Q54365.
- Q20054108 wikiPageWikiLink Q5637363.
- Q20054108 wikiPageWikiLink Q5637369.
- Q20054108 wikiPageWikiLink Q573484.
- Q20054108 wikiPageWikiLink Q629184.
- Q20054108 wikiPageWikiLink Q6518597.
- Q20054108 wikiPageWikiLink Q711294.
- Q20054108 wikiPageWikiLink Q714.
- Q20054108 wikiPageWikiLink Q7240397.
- Q20054108 wikiPageWikiLink Q7256860.
- Q20054108 wikiPageWikiLink Q726991.
- Q20054108 wikiPageWikiLink Q7373360.
- Q20054108 wikiPageWikiLink Q745741.
- Q20054108 wikiPageWikiLink Q7464031.
- Q20054108 wikiPageWikiLink Q766.
- Q20054108 wikiPageWikiLink Q773828.
- Q20054108 wikiPageWikiLink Q794747.
- Q20054108 wikiPageWikiLink Q795598.
- Q20054108 wikiPageWikiLink Q800651.
- Q20054108 wikiPageWikiLink Q8154017.
- Q20054108 wikiPageWikiLink Q8178215.
- Q20054108 wikiPageWikiLink Q82545.
- Q20054108 wikiPageWikiLink Q8302281.
- Q20054108 wikiPageWikiLink Q8302286.
- Q20054108 wikiPageWikiLink Q8373179.
- Q20054108 wikiPageWikiLink Q845449.
- Q20054108 wikiPageWikiLink Q845465.
- Q20054108 wikiPageWikiLink Q8577.
- Q20054108 wikiPageWikiLink Q909.
- Q20054108 wikiPageWikiLink Q9461565.
- Q20054108 wikiPageWikiLink Q9794.
- Q20054108 comment "The Four Aces Club was a pioneering music and recreational space in Dalston, London, that in the 1960s and '70s was one of the first venues to play black music in Britain, being credited with a significant "role in the evolution of reggae into dance music, from ska, to rocksteady, to dub, to lovers, to dancehall and the evolution of jungle." A host of notable Afro-Caribbean musicians appeared at the Four Aces – often referred to as "the jewel in Dalston's crown" – as well as soul and R&B artists, its clientele over the years including stars such as Bob Marley, Stevie Wonder and Jimmy Cliff. ".
- Q20054108 label "The Four Aces Club".