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Oakland s Alley doesn t miss a beat going virtual - San Francisco Chronicle

Oakland’s Alley doesn’t miss a beat going virtual For music lovers, the piano bar is family in the best sense, and they won’t let it slip away By Emma Silvers Oakland’s Alley doesn’t miss a beat going virtual For music lovers, the piano bar is family in the best sense, and they won’t let it slip away By Emma Silvers By Emma Silvers | San Francisco Chronicle The first time Jacqualine Simpkins set foot in the Alley, she felt overcome, and not in a good way. It was 1995, and she was visiting Oakland from her home in Bellevue, Ohio, finally seeing the Prohibition-era piano bar owned by her uncle and his longtime girlfriend. For the past few years, they’d been talking up the place, trying to convince her to move out and help run it.

Grassroots effort to save historic piano bar in Oakland at brink of closure

Grassroots effort to save historic piano bar in Oakland at brink of closure KTVU s Elissa Harrington reports. OAKLAND, Calif. - A historic piano bar in Oakland was on the verge of closing for good until A GoFundMe was launched by some loyal regulars. The Alley Piano Bar & Restaurant, located in the Grand Lake neighborhood has been around since the 1930s. But in March, it was forced to close its doors, and the owner doesn’t know when it will finally be safe to reopen. Its unique interior includes wallpaper made of business cards. There’s a lounge area with traditional songbooks and microphones.

The Alley, Oakland s last remaining piano bar, is in danger of closing

The Alley on Grand Avenue has been closed since March due to the pandemic. Its owner says the historic piano bar is on the brink of closure. Photo: Sarah Han A group of bar regulars is asking for help to forestall yet another pandemic-driven closing of an institution near and dear to so many: Oakland’s historic Alley piano bar. The timeless Alley, the third oldest bar in Oakland, has been at 3325 Grand Ave. since 1933, but with the pandemic keeping its doors closed, its owner since 2009, Jacqualine Simpkins, says it is on the brink of closure. The dedicated, die-hard Alley community has been meeting via social media, including through live, virtual events, to sing and stay connected ever since the piano bar closed in March. Through the long months of the pandemic, Alley regular Rachel Howard says, the fellow fans and singers got to know each other better and, once the situation turned dire, the Alley Preservation Society was born. Alley pianist Bryan Seet, along with Howard and

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