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Philadelphia Jazz: A Brief History

Jazz began to emerge as a distinct musical style around the turn of the twentieth century, a merging of two vernacular African American musical stylesragtime and blueswith elements of popular music. New Orleans, the "cradle of jazz," was the most important city in this process, with Chicago and New York playing particularly significant roles in the 1920s and 1930s. By the mid-twentieth century Philadelphia had become an important jazz center and a key training ground for influential jazz musicians. During its jazz heyday of the 1940s-1960s, Philadelphia produced an extraordinary number of leading jazzmen, several of whom became transformative figures in jazz history.
Jazz was created primarily by black musicians in its early years, but white musicians adopted the style early on and made contributions to its development. It was, in fact, a white New Orleans group, the Original Dixieland Jazz Band, that made the first jazz recordings in 1917.
As jazz gained national popularity in the late 1910s, many of its early practitioners began to leave New Orleans for the cities of the North. Chicago and New York were primary destinations, but Philadelphia also welcomed some of these jazzmen. Trumpeter

Freddie Keppard
cornet1890 - 1933
Frank Johnson, Bandleader and Composer
These musicians came to a city with a long tradition of African American popular music.
Frank Johnson
b.1927A century later, in the 1920s and 1930s, black Philadelphia bandleaders Charlie Gaines (1900-87), Frankie Fairfax (1899-1972), and others led dance bands in the swing style of jazz then gaining popularity. Philadelphia saw a huge increase in its African American population in this period as a result of the Great Migration, the mass movement of blacks out of the rural South to the cities of the North. These newcomers brought their southern musical traditions with them, joining urban black musicians whose families had been living in the city for generations. The result was a particularly vibrant African American musical culture, one that would nurture the careers of numerous important jazz musicians. In 1935 some of these musicians established Local #274 of the American Federation of Musicians, the Philadelphia black musicians' union that would serve as a focal point of the city's jazz community until its dissolution in 1971.
Dizzy Gillespie, Bebop Pioneer
Among the noted jazz musicians who came to Philadelphia from the South in the 1930s were bebop pioneer

Dizzy Gillespie
trumpet1917 - 1993

John Coltrane
saxophone1926 - 1967

Jimmy Heath
saxophone, tenor1926 - 2020

Benny Golson
saxophone, tenor1929 - 2024

McCoy Tyner
piano1938 - 2020

Lee Morgan
trumpet1938 - 1972

Clifford Brown
trumpetb.1930

Percy Heath
bass, acoustic1923 - 2005

Albert Tootie Heath
drums1935 - 2024

Bobby Timmons
piano1935 - 1974

Philly Joe Jones
drums1923 - 1985

Jimmy Smith
organ, Hammond B31925 - 2005

Jimmy Garrison
bass, acoustic1934 - 1976

Reggie Workman
bassb.1937

Kenny Barron
pianob.1943

Archie Shepp
saxophone, tenorb.1937
Although jazz has traditionally been a male-dominated music, women were part of the Philly jazz scene as well. Organists

Trudy Pitts
organ, Hammond B31932 - 2010

Shirley Scott
organ, Hammond B31934 - 2002

Ethel Waters
vocals1896 - 1977

Bessie Smith
vocals1894 - 1937

Billie Holiday
vocals1915 - 1959
Philadelphia was also home to a thriving white jazz community. While black and white musicians might play together informally, integrated bands were uncommon prior to the mid-twentieth century. Violinist (Giuseppe)

Joe Venuti
violin1903 - 1978

Eddie Lang
guitar1902 - 1933

Charlie Ventura
saxophone, tenor1916 - 1992

Buddy DeFranco
clarinet1923 - 2014

Red Rodney
trumpet1927 - 1994

Gerry Mulligan
saxophone, baritone1927 - 1996
"Quaker City Jazz"
Jan Savitt
b.1913During the heyday of Philadelphia jazz in the 1940s through 1960s, the city was alive with jazz clubs and home to many of the music's leading figures. There were jazz clubs and dance halls in many areas of the city, with particularly important concentrations in the area surrounding South Broad Street in South Philadelphia and along Columbia (later Cecile B. Moore) Avenue in North Philadelphia (the latter came to be known as "the Golden Strip"). Better-known touring bands played the theaters, either black theaters such as the Royal, Lincoln, or Pearl, or, in the case of the biggest name bands, both black and white, the Earle Theater, the ornate showplace at Eleventh and Market Streets. Many Philadelphia jazzmen who came of age in the 1930s and 1940s saw

Duke Ellington
piano1899 - 1974

Benny Goodman
clarinet1909 - 1986
By the late 1960s, changes in public taste and the music business signaled an end to the golden age of jazz in Philadelphia. The city remained an important jazz hub into the late twentieth century, but was no longer the preeminent jazz center it had been. The local audience became smaller and more specialized and much of the work of presenting jazz was carried out by nonprofit organizations such as the Philadelphia Clef Club of Jazz and Performing Arts, Jazz Bridge, Philadelphia Jazz Project, Lifeline Music Coalition, and Ars Nova Workshop. Jazz clubs, long the lifeblood of the music but always subject to larger economic forces and shifting musical tastes, came and went in the changing landscape. Of the city's three major full-time jazz clubs of the 1990s-Ortlieb's Jazzhaus, Zanzibar Blue, and Chris' Jazz Café-only the latter was still operating as a jazz club in the mid-2010s. Others have since come on the scene, including Time, Relish, South, Paris Bistro, and Heritage, while longtime neighborhood stalwarts such as Bob and Barbara's, LaRose, and others regularly present live jazz and various restaurants and clubs present it on an occasional basis. Together, these venues and cultural organizations continue the rich tradition of jazz in Philadelphia.
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History of Jazz
John Coltrane
Jack McCarthy
United States
Pennsylvania
Philadelphia
Chicago
New Orleans
Freddie Keppard
Frank Johnson
Dizzy Gillespie
New York City
Jimmy Heath
benny golson
McCoy Tyner
lee morgan
Clifford Brown
Percy Heath
Albert "Tootie" Heath
Bobby Timmons
"Philly" Joe Jones
Jimmy Smith
Jimmy Garrison
Reggie Workman
Kenny Barron
archie shepp
Trudy Pitts
Shirley Scott
Ethel Waters
Bessie Smith
Billie Holiday
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Joe Venuti
Eddie Lang
Charlie Ventura
Buddy DeFranco
Red Rodney
Gerry Mulligan
Jan Savitt
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Benny Goodman
Philadelphia Clef Club Of Jazz And Performing Arts
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