The Joint (music venue)


The Joint is a showroom located in Paradise, Nevada, adjacent to the city of Las Vegas. It is a common venue for classic rock and modern rock bands in the Las Vegas Valley. It opened on March 10, 1995, as part of the Hard Rock Hotel. The venue closed on February 7, 2009, and a new, larger Joint was opened two months later, doubling capacity from 2,000 to 4,000 people. The new Joint hosted various concert residencies.
The Hard Rock closed in February 2020, for renovations and rebranding as Virgin Hotels Las Vegas, with a scheduled opening later in the year. The Joint will receive a renovation as part of the project.
The Joint tends to book groups who traditionally favor arena types of venues. It has also hosted other events such as comedy acts and boxing matches.

History

The Joint opened along with the Hard Rock Hotel on the night of March 10, 1995. The music venue had capacity for up to 1,400 people. Numerous musicians performed in the Joint on opening night, and the concert was filmed and subsequently broadcast on MTV the following night. The Joint provided audience members with an intimate setting that allowed them an up-close view of performers, some of whom normally would have played in large stadiums. The Joint's success led to similar music venues being built at other nearby resorts, including the House of Blues at Mandalay Bay, The Colosseum at Caesars Palace, and the Pearl Theater at the Palms resort.
Although the Joint was built as a music venue, it hosted other events as well, such as the world premiere of Con Air on June 2, 1997. In November 2003, it hosted a fundraiser screening of The Big Empty. The screening was part of an effort by the Hard Rock to compete against its rival, the Palms, which had hosted several film and television premiere screenings. In late 2003, Jeff Beacher began hosting a variety show at the Joint, which continued its run for the next four years. In September 2006, the Joint hosted "Imagine: The Artwork of John Lennon", a collection of more than 100 art pieces created by John Lennon, including drawings, serigraphs, and lithographs.
Andrew Hewitt, the Joint's original concert promoter, announced his impending departure in late 2006, after 11 years. AEG Live took over booking for the Joint, and events occurred less frequently there following Hewitt's departure. By 2007, the Joint had capacity for 2,000 people, and there were plans to demolish it for a new, larger Joint facility. The original Joint closed on February 7, 2009, with its final performance being Mötley Crüe. The facility had held more than 1,000 concerts since its opening. The original Joint was turned into additional gaming space for the Hard Rock Hotel.

New venue

The new Joint cost $60 million. It was built on what used to be 300 parking spaces, located on the east side of the Hard Rock resort property along Paradise Road. It was designed by Scéno Plus. Like the original Joint, the new one was also built out in a rectangular floor plan, though with an increased capacity for 4,000 people, up from the 2,000 number offered at the original venue. The larger Joint was created to better compete against the House of Blues and the Pearl Theater. The new facility included a second and third level that both wrapped around the room. The furthest seat from the stage was 155 feet. In the original Joint, sound quality would vary depending on where guests would be situated in the room. This was because of a lack of sound absorption, something that was implemented into the new Joint to correct the problem. The floor at the new Joint was angled to give shorter people a better concert view.
The new Joint opened on the night of April 17, 2009, with a performance by The Killers. This was followed over the next two nights with performances by Avenged Sevenfold and Paul McCartney. In addition to its primary function as a music venue, the new Joint also hosted private events and comedy acts, as well as boxing and mixed martial arts fights. The Joint was also frequently used as convention space. In May 2009, the Hard Rock announced that Rogue Pictures had purchased the naming rights to the venue, which would now be known as The Joint by Rogue.
For 2009, Pollstar named the Joint as the Best New Major Concert Venue of the year. Within its first 10 years, the new facility had won 22 local and national awards.
In 2010 and 2011 it hosted the Dew Tour Championships as the venue for Skateboard Street.
As of 2014, the new Joint had sold more than a million tickets to 380 different events.
In March 2018, the Hard Rock was sold to a group of companies that included Virgin Hotels, and plans were announced to renovate and rebrand the resort as Virgin Hotels Las Vegas. The Joint will be renovated, but will retain its name. The Hard Rock and Joint closed on February 3, 2020, to allow for the renovations to take place. Virgin Hotels Las Vegas is scheduled to open on November 6, 2020. AEG will continue to book and operate the Joint when the resort reopens.

Notable performances

A Tom Petty concert in August 1999 brought in 1,786 audience members, although the Joint was only permitted by the Clark County Fire Department to hold 1,400 people.
Notable performers during the early to mid 2000s included Beck, Deftones, David Bowie, Robert Plant, The Rolling Stones, and Stone Temple Pilots. Lou Reed performed at the Joint in June 2003, but he became upset when audience members were busy buying alcohol at the bar during his performance. He left the stage out of anger, and people in the audience heckled him when he returned, prompting him to leave again before returning to the stage a third time. In July 2003, the original members of Duran Duran performed at the Joint as part of a reunion tour, which reunited them for the first time since 1985.
The Beastie Boys held their final Las Vegas performance on October 23, 2006, at the Joint. Fiona Apple held her most recent Las Vegas performance in September 2012, at the Joint.

Residencies

For the new Joint, AEG Live intended to regularly book rock and roll residencies at the venue in addition to one-night performances. AEG announced on April 1, 2009 that Santana would open a two-year residency show at the new Joint called Supernatural Santana: A Trip Through the Hits. The band would play 36 shows a year. Santana began its residency in May 2009. DJ Tiësto began a year-long residency in 2011.
In February 2012, Mötley Crüe did a two-week residency at the Joint named Mötley Crüe in Sin City. Each two-hour show included aerialists, dancers, pyrotechnics, and video displays. Frontman Vince Neil said, "It's Cirque meets rock. This is not a show where you just sit there and look at the stage. It's happening all around you." Later that year, Guns N' Roses did a residency show.
Mötley Crüe returned for another residency show in 2013. Def Leppard also did a residency show in 2013, known as Viva! Hysteria.
Guns N' Roses did another residency show beginning in May 2014. Kiss began a residency six months later. The Kiss residency was heavily promoted throughout the Hard Rock resort.
Rascal Flatts did a nine-show residency in 2015, marking the venue's first country music residency. The band returned a year later for another nine-show run.
Journey did a nine-show residency in 2015, and returned two years later.
In 2018 Nickelback played a five night residency starting February 23 and ending March 5 as part of their "Feed the Machine" tour.

Live recordings

Live recordings at the original Joint included:
Several live recordings also occurred at the new Joint: