BEGIN:VCALENDAR
PRODID:NingEventWidget-v1
VERSION:2.0
METHOD:PUBLISH
BEGIN:VTIMEZONE
TZID:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIC-LOCATION:America/Los_Angeles
BEGIN:DAYLIGHT
TZOFFSETFROM:-0800
TZOFFSETTO:-0700
TZNAME:PDT
DTSTART:19700308T020000
RRULE:FREQ=YEARLY;BYMONTH=3;BYDAY=2SU
END:DAYLIGHT
BEGIN:STANDARD
TZOFFSETFROM:-0700
TZOFFSETTO:-0800
TZNAME:PST
DTSTART:19701101T020000
RRULE:FREQ=YEARLY;BYMONTH=11;BYDAY=1SU
END:STANDARD
END:VTIMEZONE
BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:1464587:Event:661825
DTSTAMP:20260421T072956Z
SUMMARY:The Max: Ginuwine (LIVE)
DESCRIPTION:GINUWINE\n\nPerforming with a full live band\n+Karlos Farr
 ar & more TBA\nGinuwine is one of R&B’s preeminent love men to rise
  from the ’90s heyday of hip-hop soul. Initially teamed with Timbala
 nd, the most innovative producer of the late ’90s, Ginuwine’s sult
 ry, seductive crooning earned him a substantial female following and m
 ade him a regular presence on the R&B charts, even after the futuristi
 c production he favored was eclipsed by the more organic, retro-leanin
 g neo-soul movement.\nIn 1996, he met up with young producer Timbaland
  and cut the track “Pony,” whose slow, halting groove and impassio
 ned vocals helped Ginuwine land a deal with Sony’s 550 Music imprint
 .\nWith the strikingly inventive Timbaland behind the boards, Ginuwine
  cut his debut album, Ginuwine…The Bachelor, and released it later i
 n 1996. “Pony” became a number one R&B smash, also reaching number
  six on the pop charts, and the album became an eventual double-platin
 um hit. It spun off several more R&B hits over the next year, includin
 g “Tell Me Do U Wanna,” “I’ll Do Anything/I’m Sorry,” “H
 oller,” and “Only When Ur Lonely”; it also featured an homage to
  one of Ginuwine’s main influences in the cover of Prince’s “Whe
 n Doves Cry.” In the wake of the album’s success, demand for Timba
 land’s production services exploded, and Ginuwine became a bona fide
  sex symbol. He toured heavily in support of The Bachelor, and kept hi
 s name in the public eye in 1998 with his hit “Same Ol’ G,” whic
 h was featured on the soundtrack to Eddie Murphy’s Dr. Doolittle. La
 te that year, he also made his acting debut on an episode of the CBS s
 eries Martial Law.\nGinuwine returned with his second album, 100% Ginu
 wine, in early 1999. Again produced by Timbaland, it entered the pop c
 harts at number five, gave rise to another significant crossover hit i
 n “So Anxious,” and went platinum. “What’s So Different?” an
 d “None of Ur Friends Business” were also successful on R&B radio,
  and there was another cover of a Ginuwine hero, this time Michael Jac
 kson’s “She’s Out of My Life.” He followed it in the spring of
  2001 with The Life, despite having to endure the deaths of his father
  (who committed suicide) and mother (a victim of cancer) within the sa
 me year. It was his first album helmed by producers not named Timbalan
 d. Nonetheless, it was another success, debuting at number three on th
 e charts and once again going platinum. Moreover, the ballad “Differ
 ences” — the second single released from the album, after “There
  It Is” — became Ginuwine’s biggest pop hit yet, climbing to num
 ber four later that year.\nIn 2002, Ginuwine made his feature film deb
 ut in the gender-bending basketball comedy Juwanna Mann, playing (what
  else?) a slick R&B singer. That summer, Ginuwine returned to the Top 
 Ten courtesy of his duet with P. Diddy on “I Need a Girl, Pt. 2.” 
 Around the same time, in a somewhat bizarre incident, police captured 
 a Minnesota man who’d been impersonating the singer for the past few
  years and bilking money from business contacts. Though he didn’t ac
 hieve as much success on the singles charts, both The Senior (2003) an
 d Back II da Basics (2005) reached the Top Five of the R&B/Hip-Hop Alb
 ums chart. Even an unauthorized bootleg, I Apologize, managed to make 
 a minor impact in 2007. The singer then switched from the Sony family 
 to a distribution deal with Warner Bros. A Man’s Thoughts was releas
 ed in 2009, topped the R&B albums chart, and featured a reunion with T
 imbaland on “Get Involved.” The January 2011 single “Batteries
  — a club track on which he was joined by Trina — preceded his se
 venth album, Elgin. He then linked up with Tank and Tyrese for Three K
 ings, released in 2013 under the name TGT.\n\nFor more information vis
 it http://trueskool.com/events/the-max-ginuwine-live
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20170616T210000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20170617T020000
CATEGORIES:"san francisco", "bay area"
LOCATION:Mezzanine, San Francisco
WEBSITE:https://ginuwineatmezzanine.eventbrite.com/?aff=true
URL:https://ginuwineatmezzanine.eventbrite.com/?aff=true
CONTACT:4156258880
ORGANIZER;CN=MezzanineSF:http://trueskool.com/profile/MezzanineSF
ATTACH;FMTTYPE="image/jpeg":http://storage.ning.com/topology/rest/1.0/
 file/get/2247996108?profile=original
ATTENDEE;ROLE=REQ-PARTICIPANT;PARTSTAT=ACCEPTED;RSVP=TRUE;CN=Mezzanine
 SF:http://trueskool.com/profile/MezzanineSF
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR
