The video of this incident is horrific. People were piled up at the exits screaming unable to get out the chained doors.
A guy that lived nearby who just happened to sell the sound insulation complained about noise from the club. The insulation was not rated for the application they were using it in.
It’s that exact time for me now.
Is there a list of "deadliest nightclub fires?!"
Would such a list differentiate between "nightclubs" and, say, "rock concerts?"
For that matter: Is there a list of "deadliest country music festival fires?"
Regards,
Documentary about the fire:
https://youtu.be/OvWkoNS-muQ
The morning after the fire my phone was ringing off the hook with folks calling to make sure I was still alive. I knew a handful of folks who made it out alive and uninjured - they were all guys who played in the club and knew the layout like the back of their hands. I casually knew one guy, a drummer who used to buy gear from my uncle, who died in the blaze. He never had a chance because he was a cripple. Also knew the house soundman who was working the club and whose life was destroyed by the horrible things he witnessed that night.
The drummer in my band was a fire fighter. He was called there the next day as part of the cleanup and investigation crew. What he described to me made my knees weak and my stomach churn. Just horrifying.
I now live in Italy and have a recording studio there. I have similar, Auralex-type insulation on the walls, here and there. One day, after a memory of the Station fire popped into my head, I decided to try lighting a piece of it in the kitchen sink to test its flammability. I could not light it, even with a kitchen blowtorch. I was greatly relieved.
I had forgotten that so many people died in this horrible incident. I paid attention to it too, because my kid was at the music club going stage of life and it made me worry even more than usual.
Rest in peace to these poor unfortunate people.
Fires should be banned.