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The Crocodile

Known as The Croc, The Crocodile Cafe opened in April 1991, and many of the leading grunge bands – including Nirvana, Pearl Jam, Mudhoney, Tad, Mad Season, Sunny Day Real Estate, and Everclear – played there. Did you know that the Crocodile Cafe’s owners liked surprises? Concertgoers at the $3 Mudhoney show on October 4,…
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Moore Theatre

On June 9, 1989, Sub Pop hosted a concert featuring Mudhoney, Tad, and Nirvana at the Moore Theatre. Nirvana opened, celebrating the release of their debut album Bleach. Tickets were $6 in advance and $7 at the door. The oversold event led to a frenzied crowd that caused significant damage to the theater, resulting in a…
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Paramount Theatre

Five weeks after the release of Nevermind in 1991, when the band took the album on tour, Nirvana was still largely unknown outside the Pacific Northwest. Despite its capacity of 2,800 people, the Paramount Theatre in Seattle was the tour’s largest venue. That changed quickly after the Paramount show. A year later, Nirvana performed at the Seattle…
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The Central Saloon

For Nirvana fans, The Central Saloon holds special significance. On April 16, 1988, Nirvana performed their first Seattle show here, where Sub Pop founders Bruce Pavitt and Jonathan Poneman discovered them. The Central Saloon, established in 1892, is the oldest saloon in the city. In its early days, Yukon miners would sit on the creaky wooden…
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Linda’s Tavern

Opened in 1994, Linda’s Tavern was often called the Grunge Cheers. Nirvana’s Kurt Cobain frequented the bar, and it was the last place he was seen publicly before his death. Friends gathered there to mourn, and the owner barred MTV and others from filming. It remains open today, and visitors can sit in Cobain’s favorite…
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Screwdriver Bar

Known as a Rock N Roll Utopia, Screwdriver Bar was a rehearsal space for Nirvana from 1988 until 1990, between the release of Bleach and Nevermind. After sitting empty for years, it became a bar in 2020 where people can drink and enjoy music.A prominent feature is a large painting of Kurt Cobain complete with his acoustic guitar…
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Sub Pop

Sub Pop was the original grunge label, home to Nirvana, Soundgarden, and Mudhoney. It was Soundgarden that brought the label’s founders Bruce Pavitt and Jonathan Poneman together in Seattle in 1987. Grunge, or the Seattle sound, is a hybrid of punk rock and heavy metal. The owners marketed the style cleverly, encouraging the media to describe it as…
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Labyrinth

The Artists at Play Plaza, located right next to the Museum of Pop Culture, is an artist-created playground. A 30-foot climbing tower joins an inviting labyrinth with a rebus at its center, a human-powered carousel, child-inspired musical instruments and much more to offer child-friendly fun. The labyrinth at Artists at Play is a replica of…
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El Corazon

The 120-year-old downtown club, has been a Seattle music venue and bar since 1910. It gained fame during the grunge era, hosting Pearl Jam’s first live shows as Mookie Blaylock and performances by Soundgarden, Alice In Chains, and Mudhoney. Nirvana debuted an early version of Aneurysm here in 1990. The venue was the heart of…
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Giant Sequoia Tree

Who remembers when trees grew wild throughout the Pacific Northwest? To honor its evergreen past, Seattle moved a 30-foot-tall Sequoia (now 90 feet) 🌲 to a downtown triangle park from Aurora Avenue back in 1973. Did you know that Seattle’s Giant Sequoia🌲 made headlines in 2016, thanks to the #ManInTree incident? Dressed in khakis, a…
