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Created July 4, 2008 |
© The Chicago Bar Project |

2428 N. Western Ave. (2400N, 2400W)
Chicago, IL 60647
(773) 486-7774
"Bands Wanted!"
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The Mutiny, with its purple-painted, wooden facade and ancient Old Style sign advertising "cold beer" hanging over a battered wooden door, is found on the western side of Western, just north of Fullerton and the beer haven Quenchers, and just south of the Kennedy Expressway. "The Mutiny" blazes in the night with neon light, though the bar's formal name is "The Mutiny Corporation," as the owner incorporated upon opening. Step inside and you'll undoubtedly encounter the most interesting corporation you've ever walked into. The bar, and the entire single-story brick building housing it, is actually one long room with flooring of black linoleum and exposed brick walls lined with old photos and concert posters of bygone shows. "Mutiny looks tiny, but it's actually huge inside, like Oscar the Grouch's trashcan home," says Kiaresh Z. on Yelp (October 3, 2007), and I love trash...
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Above the bar are a few TVs tuned to the Cubs game, and a drop ceiling that was once white but now features panels painted by regulars and local artists, ala Guthries. According to Billy Roberts in his article, Every Chicago Band's Best Friend (April 27, 2007), "'Sara Scott started doing that, back in 2002. She just started bringing in tiles that all these artists down in Wicker Park would paint,' Ed tells me. Some are hand-painted, some are stenciled, some have collage. Each one is unique, and pretty amazing to look at. Rhonda, who is tending bar that night, makes sure to point out 'The Angry Pussy,' a house favorite."
Across from the bar is a South Park pinball machine in northeast corner, next to three cork dartboards, a full-size knight's armor that would make the Art Institute jealous, and a cigarette machine. A jukebox features punk and harder-edged alternative, including many of the bands that have played there, and stands next to a battered wooden phone booth with newspaper clippings covering the bar taped to it. A little further down are a pair of one-seater bathrooms, though they tell me the women's is surprisingly clean and spacious, though the toilet may or may not be attached to the floor. A pool table lies just beyond and, like the darts and Golden Tee, it's free. The air was once quite smoky in Mutiny, but the smoking ban has not only cleared all that out, but also some of the bar's patronage to casinos and bars just over the border in Indiana.
![]() Photo courtesy of Marie Kanger-Born |
The Mutiny's resident historian and red-haired friend |
The Mutiny opened in September 1990, but what was the punk rock haven before? According to Howie, the Mutiny's resident historian, it was a series of bars, including a place called Shag's, Last Chance before that, and a bar run by Sonny (who owned the pizza place across the street). Prior to that, the bar was owned by a former journeyman boxer named Tommy Kluth who ran the place from the early 1950s until May 1, 1973. Kluth named his joint, "Tommy Kluth's Gallery Bar-Headquarters, Veteran Boxers Association of Illinois, Ringo No. 2." The draw back then was that Kluth had a small boxing ring in the front of the bar, more for show than actual matches, and the walls were covered with pictures of famous boxers. Kluth also maintained a gallery of 450 pictures of local boxers who would come to Kluth's for immediate recognition, and a handout if needed. The collection included a set of original drawings dating back to 1902 by Jimmy Lavant.
Not much is known about the bar prior to Tommy's, but locals say that it was a two-lane bowling alley and that the building dates back to the early 1900s. Just take one look at the oversized urinal in the men's bathroom, similar to what you'll find at The Corner and McSorley's in New York, and you know the place has been around for a long time – so long, they're afraid to pull out that urinal for fear of what they might find in the process...
![]() Photo courtesy of Oscar Arriola |
![]() Photo courtesy of LoveChicago.org |
![]() Photo courtesy of LoveChicago.org |
"Self-righteous punks, poor in both pride and personal hygiene, pound chintzy pitchers of PBR in this local dive... Five to seven nights a week different bands, and sometimes DJs, wail, groove, and sometimes get violent in a make-shift area in the back of the bar. Although it might not look like much, this is an excellent bar to hear the next big Chicago band before they iron the bugs out and lose credibility. Here's to cheap beer and decent street parking."
– Shecky's online review
Because the Mutiny runs without a cabaret license (never applied for, actually), the place cannot legally charge a cover for bands, though it's clear they probably would never want to. After an experiment in the early 90s, bands started to appear more and more regularly within the darkened back-room of Mutiny. Slowly but surely, this generated a head of steam and it was in 1998 that the roof almost literally blew off. A Mutiny regular, Seth Skudrick, from a band called The Nerves came in with an idea: three bands, Halloween night – how 'bout it? Sure. A series of colorful and professionally done concert bills were posted all over the city, one of which still hangs beside the bar and next to the front windows overlooking Western. A crowd, the likes of which had never been assembled in Mutiny, came for what turned out to be one of the best shows ever put on there, or anywhere. The Gaza Strippers headlined, along with The Nerves and Grand Theft Auto. People still talk about that show today and, since then, a legion of young, up-and-coming bands from Chicagoland and all over the country have played here.
"Ok, after spending a Friday night at the Mutiny I have to admit that there are some fucking perks to this crazy place. Perhaps, the fact that Ed will allow you to try to fuck in the phone booth is one of them. Maybe, the fact that you can bang for thirty minutes in the ladies room is one of them, but probably the fact that all the guys are trashy and will bite you like the slut-whore you are is the best part--even when the bands are shitty."
– Sabrina C. on Yelp (June 5, 2007)
![]() Photo courtesy of Liza Pavelich |
![]() Photo courtesy of Marie-Kanger Born |
![]() Photo courtesy of canderson |
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"Where do I start with this fucking place? I've been sucked into the vortex here. I am currently disgruntled because they discontinued the 7 AM opening and I'm wishing it back real bad....even badder at 7:05 AM. I mean what's a girl to do? With the 7 AM opening, you could literally live in a loud rock bar damn near 24 hours minus the travel times to and fro at closing / opening times. I'll never forget the first day they weren't open at 7 AM, slamming my drunken body into a locked door, falling back, laying on the sidewalk sobbing why, why. Oh, the tears. Turns out the morning bartender got knee surgery and grew accustomed to sleeping a little later while on disability. Very sad."
– Christine S. on Yelp (January 10, 2008)
![]() Photo courtesy of Robert Loerzel |
![]() Photo courtesy of Jeremy Farmer |
![]() Photo courtesy of Sara |
Until about a year ago, I had never heard of Mutiny. I started hearing more about it and, frankly, with a name like "Mutiny" and knowing that it hosted punk rock shows, I expected a place that the Hell's Angels might frequent. Though the joint gives new meaning to hole-in-the-wall dive bar, what I found were actually a group of fairly down-to-earth people, though heavily tattooed and perhaps unshowered, who are as passionate about music as well as being open to people of all stripes, all of whom are united by a common goal: to rock out and get tanked. These are the very aspects of a watering hole that we appreciate the most, here at the Chicago Bar Project, and those that make for a truly unique and admirable tavern. If you like Mutiny, you might also like Fireside Bowl further west on Fullerton in Logan Square, but word has it that they don't book nearly the same number of shows anymore. For more information on the legendary joint at hand, check out the Mutiny website, and be sure to say "hi" to Howie.
~ Have a good story relating to this bar? E-mail it to me. ~
[back to the Chicago Bar Project]
– written by Sean Parnell
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| Photo courtesy of girl.x | Photo courtesy of Bryanna McGregor-Carroll |