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Martin "Marty" Chernoff (1942–2019) was a straight Jewish businessman from Brooklyn and a former rocket scientist. In the late 1960s, he purchased the Fox Hole bar at 2936 Fox Street in an area called "The Bottoms" for $32,500. His tenant was running a secret gay bar; when the tenant defaulted, Chernoff reopened it himself as the Fox Hole Lounge.
In 1980, Chernoff and Neil Feinstein purchased an old taxi warehouse across the street and opened Tracks as an after-hours club. They expanded to locations in Washington, D.C., Tampa, New York, and Orlando — but the AIDS crisis halted that expansion. LGBTQ+ Denver Guide
During the AIDS crisis, Chernoff did far more than keep the doors open. He housed homeless LGBTQ+ youth in the Tracks building and personally paid healthcare bills for people with AIDS. He was not gay himself, but he understood that the community that sustained his business needed him. He received the Ally Award from One Colorado for his lifetime contribution.
A feature film titled "Making Tracks" is in development about Chernoff's life. The short documentary "Remembering Marty Chernoff" (RMPBS, 2021) was nominated for a Heartland Emmy. Denver LGBTQ+ Bars and Clubs
During the AIDS crisis, Marty Chernoff — a straight man who happened to own Denver's biggest gay club — housed homeless LGBTQ+ youth in the Tracks building and personally paid healthcare bills for people with AIDS. He received the Ally Award from One Colorado for his lifetime contribution.
When Coors Field development forced the original location to close, Tracks reopened at 3500 Walnut Street in what is now the RiNo Art District, around 2002. In 2015, the club underwent a $250,000–$500,000 renovation that added a 40-by-12-foot LED screen (the largest indoor screen in Denver at the time) and a new DJ booth. The club spans over 8,000 square feet with multiple dance floors.
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Tracks has hosted performances by Gloria Gaynor, Thelma Houston, Crystal Waters, the Village People, CeCe Peniston, and Lance Bass. Denver-connected Drag Race stars Yvie Oddly, Willow Pill, and DJ Nina Flowers perform regularly.
The weekly and monthly event schedule includes "Drag Nation" (last Friday), "BAD" (Babes Around Denver) on first Fridays for women, "Deathwish" goth night on second Fridays, Sunday "Atomic" 18+ drag shows, and monthly roller skating nights. The club is open Thursday through Sunday, typically from 9 PM.
Tracks has outlasted every other LGBTQ+ nightclub in Colorado history. It survived the criminalization era, the AIDS crisis, the death of disco, a forced relocation, and the ongoing gentrification of RiNo. For over 40 years, it has served as the one guaranteed large-scale LGBTQ+ nightlife space in Denver — a fact that owes as much to Marty Chernoff's stubbornness and generosity as to the community that keeps showing up.
Tracks is one of many LGBTQ+ venues across Denver. Explore the full nightlife scene from Capitol Hill to RiNo.
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