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Park West

Park West Verified

322 W Armitage Ave
Chicago, IL
20,174 Followers
Explore all 28 upcoming concerts at Park West, see photos, read reviews, buy tickets from official sellers, and get directions and accommodation recommendations.
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Upcoming Concerts

SEP
20
Tickets
SEP
25
Tickets
SEP
26
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SEP
27
Tickets
OCT
03
Tickets
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Live Photos of Park West

Melvin Seals and JGB at Chicago, IL in Park West 2024
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Fan Reviews

August 18th 2024
The artist was amazing. The experience was so much more than I expected. He's so so talented and considerate of his fans. He was always making sure everyone was comfortable and putting on an amazing show. The band who was doing the live music was also phenomenal. The issues I had lied in the AWFUL security. They didnt allow us to bring in loghtsicks or bags and made us set them OUTSIDE THE VENUE and told us that they werent responsible for them. They left them on the sidewalk where anyone could have grabbed them up. I also saw many people who made it inside with lightsticks and bags even though they werent allowed. Security just wasnt doing their job right in any way. They were also just extremely rude. Worst secur5 by far. Luckily, this did not affect my experience at all as I had an AMAZING time. The music was amazing, the artist was amazing, and I would do it all again(minus the annoying security).
Breanna
August 11th 2024
So special! Nice, clean, well decorated venue with good sound system. Unlike other places I've attended. Both bands were wonderful, and the server was lovely. That said, why does it have to be so cooold?
Lynn
Melvin is in command of the keys. Jeremy held a beat and held the line, in tandem with the barefooted J-P. Oteil, another shoeless bass guitar phenom brings much more personality and dynamism to the role in the band, but make no mistake, J-P is busy thumping along at the low end of the register. What?!?! I haven't mentioned John, yet. Right. His nimble fretwork, noodling, plucking and strumming, singing while leading the musical harmonies, exchanging riffs with Melvin, interesting soulful strains wove together nicely with Jeremy, Melvin and J-P. The music cascaded across a set of audience pleasers from the first steps onto the stage, 'til the final cord got unplugged. Playing through Jerry classics, like "Reuben & Cherise," the Dylan standards "Positively 4th Street" along with "Corrina, Corrina" enabled some searing jams, interchanges between musicians. The New Speedway Boogie version the band ripped through segued nicely, bringing audience participation to the shared experience, as the ladies and gentlemen bellowed out, singing along, voicing rhetorically about getting to the top of the mountain, and finding one's way among hills in some way shape or form, rather, One way or another. The sticks Jeremy was playing with shifted first to one mallet, banging away, soloing into a drum Jam with a continuation of a rigorous performance that required all the musicians on stage to orchestrate and share roles with barely a glance among them. And, what about Melvin, again... he was throwing down, givin' a riveting performance, puttin' on a show, like playing a calliope or a harpsichord in days of old. He shared his mastery in a number of ways, sliding up and down the 88's, rising to tune in on the right tones of his organ, the box he was sitting in front of, always with a foot on the expression pedal, with the mood set variously to bluesy, gospel, as well as thundering rock & roll, with so many genres intended, in between. It was a great show, that their sound engineer, Armando, brought to the venue with all due precision of a world class act. A very pleasant surprise was the regionally high profile warm-up act, who are elevating their performances with each outing, the Joe Marcinek Band (JMB). Mixing up bass players, bringing in a lead vocalist, sharing the stage with old friends who can almost read one another's minds, having worked at their relationships for over 20 years, was an underpinning of solid, straight ahead contemporary rock & roll. Release of their first album '1 River Street' (cheeky name with a number of plays on words in the title alone), that bears a listen, or at least two or three. JMB was able to rev up the crowd, set the ambiance for the main Act while showing adept skills on originals. Before their conclusion the JMB musicians as well drove vibrations right through the center of the crowd on the familiar Black Crowes hit "Hard to Handle," demonstrating a knowledge of what had come before, in order to know where they need to go next. If you get a chance to see either of these acts again, seize the opportunity, buy their music and merch, to one day soon to rock and roll, again.
Scott
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About Park West

Park West has long been one of Chicago’s premier concert venues. Built in 1916 and transformed into a live concert hall in the late 1970s, its calendar has been filled with performances featuring some of the biggest names in contemporary rock, pop, jazz, blues, country, reggae and all points in between. Park West is also one of Chicago’s best-equipped multimedia facilities, with a sterling reputation for corporate meetings and special events.
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Type
Theater
Capacity
1,000
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