The red, photo-lined walls of the 100 Club tell the story of its extraordinary history, with the likes of Joe Strummer and Louis Armstrong, Mick Jagger and George Melly all pictured gracing the small, simple stage since it opened in 1942.
Having played a pivotal role in the development of British jazz, it has also gone down in punk history after hosting the Clash and Sex Pistols in 1976 and the Rolling Stones' only live show between 1982 and 1989.
Nowadays, the 350-capacity room plays host to smaller bands on their way to stardom and secret gigs by big names taking a break from arenas.
Currently riding high on the success of 2 critically acclaimed singles, London pop experimentalists Spector are celebrating with a little shin-dig down at the 100 Club.Somewhere between Roxy Music ...
Currently riding high on the success of two critically acclaimed singles, London pop experimentalists Spector are celebrating with a little shin-dig down at the 100 Club. Somewhere between Roxy Music a...