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New York's legendary rock club CBGB, which helped launch such seminal acts as Blondie to the Ramones, faces closure if it does not resolve a dispute over unpaid rent with the homeless charity that owns the building.
Club owner Hilly Kristal said the dispute dated from 2001, when the landlord presented a $300,000 bill for unpaid rent.
Though most of that has now been repaid, the club was handed another bill earlier this year for $76,000 which it has not paid. The club's lease comes to an end in August and talks on renewal are stalled.
"The real thing is they don't want me back," Kristal said, adding that there had been a series of disagreements over renovations and building certificates in recent years.
CBGB, which stands for "country, bluegrass and blues" even though it is most famous for punk music, rents its downtown space from the Bowery Residents' Committee -- a non-profit organization that runs a homeless shelter above the premises.
"I am not going to subsidize CBGB at the expense of homeless people," Muzzy Rosenblatt, executive director for the organization, told the New York Times. He could not be reached for comment by deadline.
The Committee wants to double the rent and negotiations over a new lease have ground to a halt amid legal wrangling that will result in a court hearing later this month.
Kristal founded the club in 1973 by converting what had been a Hell's Angels hangout into one of the most famous venues for live music in the city. He said he would fight closure of what he called a New York City institution.
"We've established something here ... This is a kind of symbol of helping young musicians and new artists," he said, recalling early gigs by the likes of Pearl Jam. "I think we do a nice thing for a lot of people; maybe it's not quite as wonderful as helping the homeless but it has its benefits."
(from Billboard.com)
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