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Jazz club

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The Louis Moholo Quintet performing at a jazz club

Ajazz clubis avenuewhere the primary entertainment is the performance of livejazzmusic, although some jazz clubs primarily focus on the study and/or promotion of jazz-music.[1]Jazz clubs are usually a type ofnightclubor bar, which is licensed to sell alcoholic beverages. Jazz clubs were in large rooms in the eras ofOrchestral jazzandbig band jazz,when bands were large and often augmented by astring section.Large rooms were also more common in the Swing era, because at that time, jazz was popular as adance music,so the dancers needed space to move. With the transition to 1940s-era styles likeBebopand later styles such assoul jazz,small combos of musicians such asquartetsandtrioswere mostly used, and the music became more of a music to listen to, rather than a form of dance music. As a result, smaller clubs with small stages became practical.

In the 2000s, jazz clubs may be found in thebasementsof largerresidential buildings,instorefrontlocations or in the upper floors of retail businesses. They can be rather small compared to other music venues, such asrock musicclubs, reflecting the intimate atmosphere of jazz shows and long-term decline in popular interest in jazz.[2]Despite being called "clubs",these venues are usually not exclusive. Some clubs, however, have acover chargeif a live band is playing. Some jazz clubs host "jam sessions"after hours or on early evenings of the week. At jam sessions, both professional musicians and amateurs will typically share the stage.

History[edit]

In the 19th century, before the birth of jazz, popular forms of live music for most well-to-do white Americans included classical concert music, such asconcertiandsymphonies,music played at performances, such as theoperaand theballet,and ballroom music. For these people, going out was a formal occasion, and the music was treated as something to listen to (if at the symphony or the opera house), or dance reservedly to (if at a ball).

During the same century,African-Americancommunities were marginalized from an economic perspective. But despite this lack of material wealth, they had thriving community and a culture based around informal music performances, such asbrass bandperformances at funerals, music sung in church and music played for families eating picnics in parks. African-American culture developed communal activities for informal sharing, such as Saturday night fish fries, Sunday camping along the shores of Lake Pontchartrain at Milneburg and Bucktown, making red beans and rice banquettes on Mondays, and holding nightly dances at neighborhood halls all over town.[3]This long and deep commitment to music and dance, along with the mixing of musical traditions like spiritual music from the church, thebluescarried into town by rural guitar slingers, theminstrel showsinspired by plantation life, the beat and cadence of militarymarching bandsand the syncopation of theragtime piano,led to the creation of a new way to listen to live music. In the jazz history books, places such as New Orleans, Chicago, Harlem, Kansas City, U Street in Washington D.C., and the Central Avenue zone of Los Angeles are often cited as the key nurturing places of jazz.[4]

The African musical traditions primarily made use of a single-line melody andcall-and-responsepattern, and the rhythms have acounter-metricstructure and reflect African speech patterns. Lavish festivals featuring African-based dances to drums were organized on Sundays atPlace Congo,orCongo Square,inNew Orleansuntil 1843.[5]Another influence on black music came from the style ofhymnsof the church, which black slaves had learned and incorporated into their own music asspirituals.[6]During the early 19th century an increasing number of black musicians learned to play European instruments.

The "Black Codes"outlawed drumming by slaves, which meant that African drumming traditions were not preserved in North America, unlike in Cuba, Haiti, and elsewhere in the Caribbean. African-based rhythmic patterns were retained in the United States in large part through" body rhythms "such as stomping, clapping, andpatting juba.[7]In the post-Civil War period (after 1865), African Americans were able to obtain surplus military bass drums, snare drums and fifes, and an original African-American drum and fife music emerged, featuring tresillo and related syncopated rhythmic figures.[8]

The abolition ofslaveryin 1865 led to new opportunities for the education of freed African Americans. Although strict segregation limited employment opportunities for most blacks, many were able to find work in entertainment. Black musicians were able to provide entertainment in dances,minstrel shows,and invaudeville,during which time many marching bands were formed. Black pianists played in bars, clubs and brothels, asragtimedeveloped.[9][10]Bluesis the name given to both amusical formand amusic genre,[11]which originated inAfrican-Americancommunities of primarily the "Deep South"of the United States at the end of the 19th century from theirspirituals,work songs,field hollers,shoutsandchantsand rhymed simple narrativeballads.[12]

Themusic of New Orleanshad a profound effect on the creation of early jazz. Many early jazz performers played in venues throughout the city, such as the brothels and bars of thered-light districtaroundBasin Street,known as "Storyville".[13]In addition to dance bands, there were numerous marching bands who played at lavish funerals (later calledjazz funerals), which were arranged by the African-American and European American communities. The instruments used inmarching bandsand dance bands became the basic instruments of jazz.[14]

Jazz Age[edit]

Despite its growing popularity, not all who lived in theJazz Agewere keen on the sound of jazz music, and especially of jazz clubs. By the advent of the 20th century, campaigns to censor the "devil's music" started to appear, prohibiting when and where jazz clubs could be built. For example, a Cincinnati home for expectant mothers won an injunction to prevent construction of a neighboring theater where jazz will be played, convincing a court that the music was dangerous to fetuses. By the end of the 1920s, at least 60 communities across the nation enacted laws prohibiting jazz in public dance halls.[15]

Prohibition in 1920 fostered the emergence of the underground, gangster-run jazz clubs. These venues served alcohol, hired black musicians, and allowed whites, blacks and audiences of all social classes to mingle socially for the first time.[15]Although the underground jazz clubs encouraged the intermingling of races in the Jazz Age, there were other jazz clubs, such as theCotton Clubin New York, that were white-only.

Bebop[edit]

By the 1940s, jazz music as a form ofpopular musicwas on the decline, and so was the popularity of jazz clubs. In the early 1940s, bebop-style performers began to shift jazz from danceable popular music towards a more challenging "musician's music." Since bebop was meant to be listened to, not danced to, it could use faster tempos. Drumming shifted to a more elusive and explosive style and highly syncopated music.[16]While bebop did not draw the huge crowds that had once flocked to Swing-era dance clubs, the bebop style was based around small combos such as thejazz quartet.With these smaller combos on stage, smaller clubs could afford to pay the ensembles even with much smaller clubs than were common in the 1930s heyday of theCotton Club.

Soul Jazz[edit]

Soul Jazz was a development ofhard bopwhich incorporated strong influences fromblues,gospelandrhythm and bluesto create music for small groups, often theorgan trioofHammond organ,drummer and tenor saxophonist. Unlikehard bop,soul Jazz generally emphasized repetitivegroovesand melodic hooks, andimprovisationswere often less complex than in other Jazz styles. It often had a steadier "funk" style groove, which was different from the swing rhythms typical of much hard bop. Soul Jazz proved to be a boon to Jazz clubs, because since organ trios were based around the powerfulHammond organ,a three-piece organ trio could fill a nightclub with the same full sound that in previous years would have required a five- or six-piece band.

Resurgence of traditionalism[edit]

Wynton Marsalis

The 1980s saw something of a reaction against the fusion and free jazz that had dominated the 1970s. TrumpeterWynton Marsalisemerged early in the decade, and strove to create music within what he believed was the tradition, rejecting both fusion and free jazz and creating extensions of the small and large forms initially pioneered by such artists asLouis ArmstrongandDuke Ellington,as well as the hard bop of the 1950s. Whether Marsalis' critical and commercial success was a cause or a symptom of the reaction against Fusion and Free Jazz and the resurgence of interest in the kind of jazz pioneered in the 1960s (particularlyModal JazzandPost-Bop) is debatable; nonetheless there were many other manifestations of a resurgence of traditionalism, even if fusion andfree jazzwere by no means abandoned and continued to develop and evolve. Well into the 1980s, the clubs where it is performed in these countries provide meeting places forpolitical dissidents,however, attendance of these clubs is minuscule compared to the popularity of jazz clubs during theJazz Age.

Notable clubs[edit]

North America[edit]

New Orleans, Louisiana[edit]

Known as the "birthplace of jazz," New Orleans is home to some of the oldest and most famous jazz clubs in the United States,[17]including:

New York, New York[edit]

St. Louis, Missouri[edit]

Washington D.C. and U Street[edit]

Chicago, Illinois[edit]

San Francisco, California[edit]

Seattle, Washington[edit]

  • Dimitriou's Jazz Alley[32]

Denver, Colorado[edit]

Boston, Massachusetts[edit]

Europe[edit]

Brussels, Belgium[edit]

London, England[edit]

Paris, France[edit]

  • Jazz Club Étoile[34]

Rome, Italy[edit]

Middle East[edit]

Tel Aviv, Israel[edit]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^Lefèvre, Bernard (2008). Luc De Baefs; Bernard Lefèvre (eds.)."Antwerpse Jazzclub 70!" Doordringen tot de essentie van de jazz "".Muziekmozaïek.No. 1. Muziekmozaïek vzw. p. 21.
  2. ^"What Killed Jazz? The Plot Thickens".JazzWax.Archived fromthe originalon 2009-08-13.
  3. ^"A New Orleans Jazz History, 1895–1927".nps.gov.
  4. ^"The Shape of Jazz That Was".Boston Magazine.Archived fromthe originalon 2015-09-23.Retrieved2014-11-13.
  5. ^"The primary instrument for a cultural music expression was a long narrow African drum. It came in various sized from three to eight feet long and had previously been banned in the South by whites. Other instruments used were the triangle, a jawbone, and early ancestors to the banjo. Many types of dances were performed in Congo Square, including the 'flat-footed-shuffle' and the 'Bamboula.'"African American Registry.Archived2014-12-02 at theWayback Machine
  6. ^Cooke 1999,pp. 14–17, 27–28
  7. ^Palmer, Robert (1981: 39).Deep Blues.
  8. ^Kubik, Gerhard (1999: 52).Africa and the Blues.Jackson, MS: University Press of Mississippi.
  9. ^Cooke 1999,pp. 28, 47
  10. ^Catherine Schmidt-Jones (2006)."Ragtime".Connexions.RetrievedOctober 18,2007.
  11. ^Kunzler'sDictionary of Jazzprovides two separate entries: blues, an originally African-American genre (p. 128), and the blues form, a widespread musical form (p. 131).
  12. ^"The Evolution of Differing Blues Styles".How To Play Blues Guitar. Archived fromthe originalon 2010-07-19.Retrieved2008-08-11.
  13. ^Cooke 1999,pp. 47, 50
  14. ^"Original Creole Orchestra".The Red Hot Archive.RetrievedOctober 23,2007.
  15. ^ab"Culture Shock: Flashpoints: Music and Dance: Early Jazz".pbs.org.
  16. ^Floyd, Samuel A., Jr. (1995).The Power of Black Music: Interpreting its history from Africa to the United States.New York: Oxford University Press.
  17. ^Burns, Ken."Places Spaces & Changing Faces – New Orleans".JAZZ.PBS. Archived fromthe originalon 2016-03-18.
  18. ^"Seventh Avenue South | - Legendärer Jazzclub in Manhatten".Jazzband Live(in German).Retrieved2020-02-19.
  19. ^"PBS – JAZZ A Film By Ken Burns: Places Spaces & Changing Faces – Savoy Ballroom".pbs.org.
  20. ^"PBS – JAZZ A Film By Ken Burns: Places Spaces & Changing Faces – Minton's Playhouse".pbs.org.
  21. ^"PBS – JAZZ A Film By Ken Burns: Places Spaces & Changing Faces – Cotton Club".pbs.org.
  22. ^Drake, Kayla (June 15, 2022)."New play highlights Club Riviera — one of the biggest Black nightclubs in the '40s".STLPR.Retrieved2023-10-07.
  23. ^"The Jazz History Of St. Louis-Part 4: The 1950's".STLPR.Retrieved2023-10-07.
  24. ^"Club Plantation".The Metro St. Louis Live Music Historical Society.Retrieved2023-10-07.
  25. ^"U Street Jazz – Venues – The Howard Theatre".gwu.edu.
  26. ^"U Street Jazz – Venues – Bohemian Caverns".gwu.edu.
  27. ^"U Street Jazz – Venues – The Lincoln Theatre".gwu.edu.
  28. ^abcd"Researching Chicago Jazz Venues – Chicago Jazz – Library Guides at UChicago".uchicago.edu.
  29. ^"Palm Tavern".bizland.com.
  30. ^Caine, Dan (1989-08-17)."Blue Note Memories".Chicago Reader.Retrieved2023-10-07.
  31. ^"San Francisco's famed Blackhawk jazz club showcased Black excellence".KTVU FOX 2.2023-02-24.Retrieved2023-10-07.
  32. ^"3 solid-gold shows coming to Jazz Alley".seattletimes.com.
  33. ^"3 Dazzle presenting live jazz performances".
  34. ^"Jazz Club Etoile at Le Meridien Hotel in Paris France".www.eutouring.com.Retrieved2023-10-07.
  35. ^"Tel Aviv's Beit Ha'amudim celebrates 10 jazzy years".The Jerusalem Post | JPost.com.2021-12-12.Retrieved2023-12-06.

Further reading[edit]