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Jazz Fest Deemed A Success (Three Years In A Row): A Look Back At The Virginia Beach Jazz Festival 1959-1961

Courtesy Pintrest
A jazz festival should be a high point in the activities of both musicians and listeners.
Dan Morgenstern
Thankfully, no incidents occurred inside or out of the Convention Dome, at the first annual Virginia Beach Jazz Festival, being hailed a success among critics and the community. Other jazz festivals were beginning to introduce more modern groups of the post-war era, often leaving Dixieland jazz of the past to be used as "pre-concert appetizers," according to John S. Wilson in his "New York Times" review of the fourth annual Randall's Island Jazz Festival on August 21, 1959. However, in the South, the jazz of earlier years was more welcomed and the lineup for the '59 Virginia Beach Jazz Fest reflects this.
Opening the show was the Jolly Roger Band, playing a set of Dixieland standards, followed by the

Charlie Byrd
guitar1925 - 1999

Keter Betts
bass, acousticb.1928
Bertell Knox
drumsThe surprise performance of the festival was the Newton Thomas Trio, out of Richmond. They played a mix of standards, including "Camptown Races," which received a standing ovation. Newton Thomas (piano) was backed by Warren "Bones" Garrison on bass and

Buddy Deppenschmidt
drums1936 - 2021


Charles Mingus
bass, acoustic1922 - 1979
A streak of violent incidents also erupted that evening in Newport, with thousands of drunken rioters roaming the streets, including a sailor getting jumped by six youths, eight civilians hopping on a moving car, smashing out the windows and four others setting a fire in a hotel's second floor. The National Guard was called in while firefighters blasted rioters with high-pressure hoses. 160 individuals were treated in the hospital, and 200 were arrested, leaving nothing but empty beer and liquor bottles scattered on the streets, which were swept into overflowing mounds of garbage on the curb. The Newport festival area was a "warzone," making Virginia Beach promoters weary (once again) in regard to attendance at their event and they were concerned about the safety of the Virginia Beach community. Military gendarmes and police were on standby, lining the perimeter of the Dome, but again, no disorderly incidents occurred, solidifying the Virginia Beach Jazz Fest's success for the second year in a row.
Outcomes of some jazz festivals in the summers of '59 and '60 may have been less than desired, but Virginia Beach made up for it and was a pleasant surprise for both performers and patrons. "A jazz festival should be a high point in the activities of both musicians and listeners," Dan Morgenstern scribed in a 1961 issue of "Metronome" magazine and goes on to state that "A jazz festival should find room for music which is seldom (or never) heard in other public contexts." The Virginia Beach Jazz Fest possessed both of these attributes. It did not lower itself to the "three-ring circus" standards of other jazz fests during those years, whose main focus seemed to be more on commercialism and variety rather than quality and organization.
Tommy Gwaltney
clarinet1921 - 2003

Count Basie
piano1904 - 1984

Buck Clayton
trumpet1911 - 1991
Sources:
- Baker, Joe. "Looking Back: 1960 Newport Jazz Festival Riot." The Newport Daily News. 12 December, 2012.
- Klotz, Kelsey. "Dave Brubeck and the Performance of Whiteness." Oxford University Press. 19 January, 2023.
- Morgenstern, Dan. "Jazz Why Some Are & Some Arent Festivals." Metronome. 7 July, 1961.
- "Record Number of Arrest Made In City Curing Jazz Festival Riot." Newport Daily News. 5 July, 1960.
- Rose, Norman. "The Virginia Beach Festival." Downbeat. 1 September, 1960. Pg 17.
- Thomas, Newton (Trio). Virginia Beach Jazz Festival. 30 August, 1959. (Unreleased recording, personal archives)
- Ward, C. Geoffrey and Ken Burns. "The History of Jazz." Alfred A. Knopf Publishing. 2005.
- "WBOF Presents Concert by the SeaEast Coast." Vee Bee Records. 30 August, 1959.
- Wilson, John S. "Cool Jazz Fete; 4th Summer Festival on Randall's Island." The New York Times. 22 August, 1959.
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Jazz in Long Form
Dave Brubeck Quartet
Troy Hoffman
Jolly Roger Band
New York Jazz Quartet
Ann Rayburn
Charlie Schneer
Hal Posey
Charlie Byrd
Keter Betts
Bertell Knox
Newton Thomas
Charles Mingus
Tom Gwaltney
Count Basie
Pat Roberts
Buck Clayton
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