33-37 Wardour Street

What did Flamingo Club David Bowie do at 33-37 Wardour Street?

By Legacy Team·

33-37 Wardour Street: A Crucible of Sound Standing at 33-37 Wardour Street, you're at the epicenter of London's most transformative musical decades, where this single address hosted three distinct legendary venues that shaped British and American pop culture. In the 1960s, the Flamingo Club pulsed with mod energy as organist Georgie Fame recorded his breakthrough hit "Night Train" within these walls, establishing the spot as a breeding ground for blue-eyed soul and jazz fusion that would define a generation.

The venue's evolution continued through the 1970s as the Whiskey-a-Go-Go, where funk royalty like James Brown and Kool & the Gang brought their explosive, sweating energy to Soho's intimate dance floor, their performances radiating through the very bricks that now stand before you. By the 1980s, transformed into The Wag Club, this same location became the unlikely stage where David Bowie—already a global icon—filmed the innovative MTV video for "Blue Jean" in 1984, proving that even at the height of his fame, he understood that real cultural lightning struck in small, sweaty clubs where the future was still being invented.

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This is not merely a plaque on a wall; it's a vertical timeline of how one address became a pilgrimage site where mod kids, funk pioneers, and glam rock legends all converged to change music forever.

Blue Plaque
The commemorative plaque at 33-37 Wardour Street