BinkieBaumont said:
Forgotten Man said:Why not have both? I believe there's a serious lack in clubs today when it comes to atmosphere or a theme... too cheap to put a little money and effort into making a place really interesting.
My favorite (what I consider true Jazz) is the pre-war stuff... we're talking 1927 to 1935. Louis Armstrong ain't no "Honkey Tonk" Hot syncopation ain't "Honkey Tonk" we're talkin' sharp, tight scatting like the Rhythm Boys, or early Mills Brothers... ya know, HOT JAZZ MAN! Duke Ellington, Paul Whiteman, Ambrose Orchestra, Ted Lewis, Ina Ray Hutton... the list goes on!
I do like 40's Lester Young, he's pretty groovy.
Rundquist said:There’s nothing wrong with ambience and a cool club. However, I would hate for jazz to become a nostalgia act. I don’t want it to be the equivalent of guys in the 40’s dressing up in 1890’s arm garters and paper collars.
dhermann1 said:This is an interesting diversion from the main topic here. When I was a kid in the 50's and 60's, most Dixieland jazz (i.e. 20's) was played by old fogies, who played it in a lame, middle aged manner, that just killed the vitality of the music, and made young people equate it with foginess. At Club Wit's End, they've found a whole new generation of musicians who have rediscovered this music, and have infused it with a great youthful energy again. And it's like night and day, the difference.
If you have a WW II style club going, you of course will want to concentrate on Swing era music. But this still gives you a lot of leeway. I would suggest trying to have a big room and a small room. The big room can be for dance events, while the small room can host the small groups. The small group venue could present a greater variety of styles of jazz, I would imagine.
One other thing I seen that could help. If you want to have a place where you can have big, or biggish, bands for people to dance to, set it up so there's like a mezzanine, or some place where people can sit and drink and watch the dancers. The whole key to keeping any enterprise like this going is selling enough liquor. That's absolutely it in a nutshell. Dancers will provide entertainment, but they sure as heck won't want to drink. Gatorade, maybe. Having drinkers subsidize the whole operation is an absolute must.