Just so that everyone is aware "Epic Saturdays" is an alternative night (AKA Gay Night). I dont want anyone showing up and being totaly suprised. I for one am happy to see the longest running gay night back on Lansdowne Street. Patrick Lyons began that endevor 27 years ago. To see it come home to the old Avalon space is a great thing for that community.
And its a money maker!
Oh, interesting. Where was it before, Roxy?
I might have to check it out, Ive always found that gay clubs have excellent music.
Edit: Heres an article:
An ?Epic? move: Boston?s undisputed gay nightlife champ relocates to House of Blues on Sat., Oct. 17
by Rick Dunn
EDGE Community Editor
Tuesday Oct 13, 2009
In a joint venture with event production juggernaut Live Nation, party promoters Chris Harris and Raphael Sanchez earlier this week announced plans to relocate their weekly GLBT dance party ?Epic Saturdays? to the newly-christened House of Blues on Lansdowne Street beginning October 17.
The undisputed champ of Boston gay night life, Harris & Sanchez?s Epic Saturdays have attracted weekly crowds of 1000+ since the party?s October 2007 debut at the Roxy/Boston.
The final Epic Saturday at The Roxy this past weekend.
The move from Roxy to the three-story Lansdowne Street venue is a homecoming for Boston?s gay club culture. House of Blues stands in the spot once occupied by Avalon, the legendary super-club once considered the epi-center of Boston?s gay nightlife scene.
"For years, the slogan for Lansdowne Street was ?America dances here,? and we?re ready to revive that tradition," says Harris, who co-promoted events at Avalon prior to its closing with Gay Mafia Boston?s Raphael Sanchez.
When Avalon and its neighboring clubs were shuttered two years ago, almost 30 years of continuous Sunday gay club nights sadly ended. Even though Sundays were languishing, the party didn?t end on a sour note. Lyons Group drafted promoters Harris and Sanchez to produce and promote a gay Saturday night party in Avalon, which had never hosted a dance party exclusively for the GLBT community. Those three months proved Boston gay nightlife was not on decline, but in search of upscale experience with top-notch talent and performers.
"I personally think that being asked to return to this amazing space is huge for the gay community. The customer really benefits because our increased capacity allows us to charge less at the door and now we can book big name talent with the kind of performance fees that were once out of reach for us. It?s a win-win situation," says Harris.
http://www.edgeboston.com/index.php?ch=nightlife&sc=&sc2=features&sc3=&id=96859