Terminal 5

Music & Nightlife

Midtown West

Photograph: Virginia Rollison

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<strong>Rating: </strong>1/5
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What's on at Terminal 5

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Josh Ritter and the Royal City Band + The Felice Brothers

Alternative rock, Indie rock, Folk

  • $$

Josh Ritter, the witty, wordy young bard from Moscow, ID, brings his verbose lyricism and vintage songwriting sensibilities to NYC. Now with a best-selling novel, Bright's Passage, under his belt, Ritter will be playing tonight from his new, blue breakup...

  1. Sat May 18
  2. Terminal 5 610 W 56th St, (at Eleventh Ave), New York
  3. advance $32, at the door $35
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Fall Out Boy

Alternative rock, Punk & hardcore

  • $$

The foremost boy band for the cutter generation, Fall Out Boy slaps on some guy-liner and returns to touring after a four-year absence with a new album, Save Rock and Roll.

  1. Wed May 29
  2. Terminal 5 610 W 56th St, (at Eleventh Ave), New York, New York
  3. May 29 sold out; Sep 7 $35–$45
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Rancid

Punk & hardcore

  • $$
  1. Thu Jun 20
    – Fri Jun 21
  2. Terminal 5 610 W 56th St, (at Eleventh Ave), New York
  3. advance $28, at the door $32
More info

OMD

Pop, Rock & roll

  • Critics' pick
  1. Wed Jul 17
  2. Terminal 5 610 W 56th St, (at Eleventh Ave), New York
  3. advance $30, at the door $35
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Comments & ratings

Rated as: 1/5 (1 rating)
  • Terminal 5 is the worst space to see great music. Sightlines are awful, entrance chaotic, and for whatever reasons, the crowds are the rudest in the city. Stay away for your own safety.

    JG Mon Mar 11
    Rated as: 1/5
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  • Terminal 5 is one of the worst concert venues this city has hands down, and vowed after seeing Spiritualized there in May to never return. The acoustics in that room turns your favorite band into the sound of mud every time no matter how popular the band, and how hard their sound guy works. The security there are a bunch of high school drop outs that make getting onto a transatlantic flight go more smoothly with less intrusions into every detail in your bag. The crowds there act like the bands are on TV and stand there bored texting, or just filming the whole time on their cellphones. Terminal 5 is ensuring that Rock and Roll is no place for rebellion and transgression, and keeps those curfews and set lists tight so they can close up and count the money. Avoid at all costs, and urge your favorite bands to steer clear of playing this venue.

    Todd Sun Jul 22 2012
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