Originally posted by BLUESNIK'S REVOX
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Granted that Sonny Rollin's appearance at the club must have been a revelation at the time and the fact that this precipitated a roster of brilliant musicians from Miles, Oscar Peterson, Woody Herman, Sarah Vaughan, etc, etc throughout the 60's and 70's, growing up in the 80's as a young jazz fan the Scott's club was already starting to lose it's relevance. It might have clung on to pick up the generation of musicians including the likes of Loose Tubes but I don't think it has had so much relevance to jazz since his death in 1996. Not living in London I can only go by listings from magazines and other websites, but it does seem that, despite the helping hand in the late 60's avant garde scene, the more relevant / progressive contemporary acts seem to get snapped up by other clubs. Looking at the website, there are groups performing in the next three / four months that really appeal (Kenny Garrett / Wayne Escoffery / Pay Metheny , etc) but there are a staggering number of fusion acts as well as an imbalance of singers. Anything of the ilk of William Parker, AACM, Jason Adasiewizc, Joe McPhee, etc kind of stuff is absent. A lot of the bookings are probably coincide with the European festival tours whereas the gigs by Rollins back in the 1960's seem so special as he was then one of the two major tenor men of the time, at the top of his game and performing at a time when jazz gigs by musicians of that stature were a rarity.
The problem with the Scott club is that it is so tied up with the 1960's scene, even to the extent that the Krays seem an integral part of the narrative along with the crap jokes. i.e. It's reputation has gone beyond pure, musical reasons.
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