$10.00 - $65.00
Saturday, November 23, 2024 at 6:00 PM - 11:00 PM EST
A special one night only film screening and live show with turkey dinner!
The Last Waltz at the Schvitz Ballroom & Bathhouse - Saturday November 23
Our ballroom is mid-renovation, but decided we're going to show The Last Waltz - the greatest concert film ever made - and follow it up with a live band performing your favorite songs by The Band and their friends. We'll also be serving a full Turkey dinner, like in the movie. This is going to be a truly one-of-a-kind event, not to be missed!
Doors at 6 Β· Film at 7 Β· Show at 9 Β· Sauna open from 6 to 11
Ticket Prices include all taxes. Tickets should be available at the door, but pre-sales are a huge help in planning!
Film & Show only $10
Film & Show with Sauna access $40
Turkey Dinner $25
Film & Show & Turkey Dinner $35
Film & Show & Sauna & Turkey Dinner $65
The (Cover) Band:
Dave Shettler - Drums / Vocals
Eddie Baranek - Guitar / Vocals
Pete Ballard - Pedal Steel
Ian Haubert - Organ / Wurlitzer
Kyle Schanta - Bass / Vocals
Set List:
Up on Cripple Creek
The Weight
I Shall Be Released
Night They Drove Old Dixie Down
Across the Great Divide
The Shape I'm In
Long Black Veil
Rockin Chair
Look Out Cleveland
Chest Fever
King Harvest
Tears of Rage
Caledonia Mission
Helpless (Neil Young)
plus some more surprises....
Trailer for Martin Scorsese's film starring The Band, Bob Dylan, Neil Young, Eric Clapton, Muddy Waters,Van Morrison, Dr John, Ronnie Hawkins, Ron Wood, Ringo Starr, Neil Diamond, Joni Mitchell, The Staples, Emmylou Harris, Paul Butterfield....
An excerpt from the Rolling Stone article by David Fear in November 2020:
Why the Bandβs βThe Last Waltzβ Is the Greatest Concert Movie of All Time
Over 40 years ago, The Band gave their final concert in their original lineup, a massive swan song that these Canadian troubadours turned into an all-star spectacle. Calling the event βThe Last Waltz,β the groupβs de facto leader Robertson β whoβd grown tired of being a rock & roll road warrior β and San Francisco promoter Bill Graham staged a no-expense-spared adieu that started with a Thanksgiving feast and ended with everyone from Neil Diamond to Neil Young accompanying the quintet. As far as farewells go, this one was major. And it might have been relegated to the you-had-to-like-have-been-there-man history books had a bearded, jittery Martin Scorsese not decided to ditch some responsibilities and call in some favors. The idea was to simply record the evening for posterity, though the then-35-year-old filmmaker had a few ideas of his own to add in to the mix. What he ended up with was the definitive document of these American-music scholars, an epitaph to a specific era of rock history, and the single greatest concert movie of all time.
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