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Live at The Cellar: Vancouvers Iconic Jazz Club and the Canadian Co-operative Jazz Scene in the 1950s and 60s

English

By (author): Marian Jago

In the 1950s and 60s, cooperative jazz clubs such as Vancouvers Cellar, Edmontons Yardbird Suite, and Halifaxs 777 Barrington Street opened their doors in response to new forms of jazz expression emerging after the war and a lack of available performance spaces outside major urban centres. Operated on a notfor-profit basis by the musicians themselves, these hip new clubs created spaces where young jazz musicians could practise their art close to home.

Live at the Cellar looks at this unique period in the development of jazz in Canada. Centered on Vancouvers legendary Cellar club, and including co-ops in four other cities, it explores the ways in which these clubs functioned as sites for the performance and exploration of jazz as well as magnets for countercultural expression in other arts, such as literature, theatre, and film. Marian Jagos deft combination of new, original research with archival evidence, interviews, and photographs allows us to witness the beginnings of a pan-Canadian jazz scene as well as the emergence of key Canadian jazz figures, such as P.J. Perry, Don Thompson, and Terry Clarke, and the rise of jazz icons such as Paul Bley and Ornette Coleman. Although the Cellar and other jazz co-ops are long shuttered, in their day they created a new and infectious energy that still reverberates in Canadas jazz scene today.

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Product Details
  • Weight: 680g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 15 Oct 2018
  • Publisher: University of British Columbia Press
  • Publication City/Country: Canada
  • Language: English
  • ISBN13: 9780774837682

About Marian Jago

Marian Jago originally from Canadas west coast is now a lecturer in popular music and jazz studies at the University of Edinburgh. She has published frequently on a wide variety of jazz topics for the Journal of Jazz Studies Jazz Perspectives Jazz Research Journal Routledge Bloomsbury and others. Some of her recent work looks at the relationship of jazz to the writing of Jack Kerouac the jazz economy of New York in the 1960s and extended studio techniques versus liveness in jazz recordings. She also maintains an active interest in the Canadian jazz scene as well as the music and pedagogical practices of Lee Konitz and Lennie Tristano.

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