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Tiny Ruins Announces Some Were Meant For Sea 10th Anniversary Tour + Reissue Annabel Kean / Photo credit: Si Moore / Thursday 3rd June, 2021 2:00PM
Tiny Ruins head honcho
Hollie Fullbrook has been hit with the realisation that a whole decade has passed since she released her debut album
Some Were Meant For Sea and embarked on her first solo tour of Aotearoa. To mark the occasion,
Some Were Meant For Sea will be reissued on seafoam green translucent vinyl LP and Digipak CD with previously unreleased bonus track The Oldest Bar in Town , and this winter Fullbrook will be retracing the steps she took ten years ago, touring the same four cities she did back in 2011. Of course her fanbase and average crowd size has ballooned a fair bit since then, so the specific venues aren t exactly the same Wine Cellar has been swapped out for the larger capacity
February 4, 2021 at 11:30am
After several difficult months for Meridian Pint (6035 Wilson Blvd), owner John Andrade said an opportunity came along to sell the business and he took it.
The bar in Dominion Hills was part of a small, pint-sized franchise when it opened in 2019, but the Columbia Heights location in D.C. closed as part of the move to Arlington. Smoke & Barrel, another Andrade restaurant in Adams Morgan, closed late last year. Brookland Pint in D.C. remains open.
“It is with heavy heart I announce I am no longer the principal owner of Meridian Pint,” Andrade said in a post on Facebook this week. “This past year presented fiscal challenges that were difficult to survive. And although Meridian Pint and its staff received heroic and loyal support from our incredible Arlington neighbors, ultimately, Meridian Pint was simply unprepared financially to keep operating to a level that the community and our amazing staff deserves.”
Jules Maes Saloon comes back from the dead. Author: Jim Dever, KING 5 Evening (KING 5) Published: 7:30 PM PST January 13, 2021 Updated: 8:06 PM PST January 13, 2021
SEATTLE Jules Maes Saloon served its first drink back in 1888, and it looked like they d served their last in 2020. But Raché Hemmelgarn had a different plan. This is my favorite bar to come to, said Hemmelgarn.
She already owned a bar in Kent. But Hemmelgarn felt a sentimental attachment to this place that claims to be Seattle s oldest tavern and was once a speakeasy. A place with so much history, you can see it in the worn foot rails, and a bar top shaped by a century of resting forearms. It s the place where she and her husband s love story began.