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Listings are
in the opposite order of appearance: headliner is listed at the top,
next is the support band(s),
and the last band listed is the opener.
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Wednesday July 1
2026
8:00PM doors -- music at 8:30PM ••• 21 AND OVER $13 in advance / $15 at the door $17.61 in advance [13 face value +4.61 service fee] Black Furies blackfuries.bandcamp.com/album/black-furies punk rock Party Force instagram.com/mfpartyforce skate punk thrash Class of '77 classof77sf.com/ punk Black Furies -from San Francisco, CA -San Francisco-based Black Furies take influence from '70s punk, '80s hardcore, and straight-up rock & roll to create their own blazing punk soundtrack. They debuted in 2004 with a self-titled album on Take Root, and followed up the next year with an EP, Meanwhile, Back in the States... In 2004, they also contributed some music to the Wondertaker Records compilation Death Rattle and Roll, Vol. 1. Spreading their name throughout the West Coast occurred playing various shows with the likes of The Dickies, the Angry Samoans, and the Sick, among others. Comprised of Cliff Truesdell (vocals/guitar), Clint Blatchford (guitar/vocals), Michael Scanland (bass/vocals), and Mark Adams (drums), the group next signed to Gearhead in the first half of 2005. Tour dates with Million Dollar Marxists appeared that fall, which led up to the release of their label debut, Death Trip Saturday Night, in November. Black Furies next appeared at 2006's South by Southwest in Austin. ~ Corey Apar, Rovi Party Force -from Oakland, CA -Fight, Fuck, Cry, Tequila! Punk Rock! Class of '77 -from San Francisco, CA -CLASS OF ’77 is a band that has been to the rodeo, and rocked it! It is a tribute to the Punk Explosion of 1977 that reinvented and saved Rock music. The term Punk was coined about the music that exploded that year and blew away the cobwebs of the early Seventies’ scene. Class of ’77 honors the bands and the music that drove that cultural explosion. The music was created for “Outcasts and Artists,” and we adhere to that model. We celebrate the music of bands like: The Clash, The Dead Boys, The Damned, The Ramones, Early Blondie, Generation X, Johnny Thunders, and much more… People have responded to our live performance from the get-go; singing along, pogoing, revisiting a time of anarchy and energy. We interpret these songs in a way that is fresh and sonic, yet remains true to the spirit of its time. Our collective stage presence is energetic and fun. You will leave humming the tunes. But it all comes back to chemistry, and a reawakening of a revolution. It is still music for the outcast and artist in every one of us. |
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