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  2. Smalls Jazz Club - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smalls_Jazz_Club

    Smalls Jazz Club is a jazz club at 183 West 10th Street, Greenwich Village, New York City. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] Established in 1994, [ 3 ] it earned a reputation in the 1990s as a "hotbed for New York's jazz talent" with a "well-deserved reputation as one of the best places in the city to see rising talent in the New York jazz scene".

  3. Smalls Paradise - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smalls_Paradise

    By 1983, the club was known as the New Smalls Paradise. This version of Smalls Paradise offered everything from music and dancing to craft shows and political speeches. [63] By 1986, the club, which was the longest-operating night club in Harlem, had fallen vacant. Before its closure it had undergone a transition from a jazz to a disco club.

  4. Across 7 Street - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Across_7_Street

    Across 7 Street (also spelled Across 7th Street) was an American jazz group co-led by Ari Roland and Chris Byars. [1] The group played Sunday nights at Smalls Jazz Club for nine years until the original club's closure in 2003, [2] and also played at the University of the Streets. [3] The band was formed after the death of saxophonist C. Sharpe.

  5. List of jazz venues - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_jazz_venues

    A jazz club is a venue where the primary entertainment is the performance of live jazz music. Jazz clubs are usually a type of nightclub or bar, which is licensed to sell alcoholic beverages. Jazz clubs were in large rooms in the eras of Orchestral jazz and big band jazz, when bands were large and often augmented by a string section.

  6. Black and tan clubs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_and_tan_clubs

    Smalls Paradise was located in the basement of 2294 Adam Clayton Powell Jr. Boulevard at 134th Street. It opened in 1925 and was owned by Ed Smalls (né Edwin Alexander Smalls; 1882–1976). At the time of the Harlem Renaissance, Smalls Paradise was the only one of the well-known Harlem night clubs to be owned by an African-American and integrated.

  7. Omer Avital - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Omer_Avital

    In 1995 and 1996, Avital made an impact on the New York jazz scene with a series of breakout piano-less groups at the original Smalls Jazz Club, including a classic sextet with four saxophones, bass and drums, alternately included saxophonists Myron Walden, Mark Turner, Gregory Tardy, Joel Frahm, Charles Owens, Grant Stewart, Jay Collins and ...

  8. Category:Jazz clubs in New York City - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Jazz_clubs_in_New...

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  9. Grant Stewart (musician) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grant_Stewart_(musician)

    He then began playing at Smalls Jazz Club when it opened in 1993. [2] His younger brother, Philip, has been a drummer in Stewart's bands since 2005. [2] Stewart is the first to have been interviewed for the long-running jazz-interview podcast The Jazz Session when it was created by Jason Crane in 2007. [3]