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Dallas International Guitar Festival, Dallas TX | Nearby Businesses


2200 N Stemmons Fwy
Dallas, TX 75207

(972) 240-2206

The Dallas International Guitar Festival is the world's oldest and largest guitar festival, blending musicians, fans (that's you!), collectors and celebrities together into one musical extravaganza.What began as the grassroots Dallas Guitar Show has now evolved into the spectacle that is the Dallas International Guitar Festival. With over 140,000 square feet of space that includes three live music stages, thousands of guitars and musical equipment, over 450 booths, exhibits and other special events and activities, the Dallas International Guitar Festival has more than enough to keep you busy all weekend! Join us next year on April 20, 21 and 22 for some incredible shows and unbelievable instruments. Stay tuned right here for all of our band and musician announcements as they happen!

Concert Venue Near Dallas International Guitar Festival

Jack Daniels Club - American Airlines Center
Distance: 1.3 mi Competitive Analysis
2500 Victory Ave
Dallas, TX 75219

214-222-3687

Maple Projects
Distance: 1.0 mi Competitive Analysis
2819 the. mall
Dallas, TX 75219

NBA Finals Game 5 at American Airlines Center
Distance: 1.3 mi Competitive Analysis
2500 Victory Ave
Dallas, TX 75219

214-222-3687

Performance Venue Near Dallas International Guitar Festival

Sammons Cabaret
Distance: 0.7 mi Competitive Analysis
3630 Harry Hines Blvd
Dallas, TX 75219

(214) 520-7788

What is Cabaret? (From www.thecabaret.org) Cabaret has its origins in 19th-century Paris, at Le Chat Noir, where musicians and poets performed in a casual atmosphere where people felt free to eat and drink. The word and descriptions of cabaret are derived from the French word meaning "wine cellar" to describe the small room where this form of entertainment was born. Over time, European cabaret evolved into a number of forms, including comedy, burlesque and sociopolitical satire. In America, cabaret was performed in speakeasies and other intimate nightclub venues and evolved into a much more jazz-infused style of performance. New York City nightclubs, like the Cafe Carlyle, feature singers associated with music from a genre known as the Great American Songbook. Today, cabaret is its own, identifiable art form, distinctive from musical theatre, nightclub singing, or a concert. The most essential elements of cabaret are simple: a performer in a small room with an audience at close range, seated around cozy tables, with the performer mere feet from the audience. "...An evening of song and stories in an intimate space that shatters the "fourth wall." Part stand-up comic, part balladeer, part evangelist; today's performer often has a theme that unifies the evening, knows a great deal about the music they're singing, and share that information in witty and inventive ways. At its best, cabaret can amuse, entertain, and inform...it can dazzle you, catch you unaware and make you weep... The audience participates in a direct, emotional conversation with the artist..." — Andrea Marcovicci, in the New York Times