Trocadero Transfer

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The Trocadero Transfer was the most popular gay after hours dance club in San Francisco from its opening in December 1977 to the early 1990s. It was located at 520 4th St. at Bryant in the SoMa neighborhood. In 2000 a new owner took over, the name was changed to the Glas Kat, and the club was remodeled.

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[edit] Origin of the name "Trocadero Transfer"

The stylish connotations of the name Trocadero derive from the Battle of Trocadero in southern Spain, a citadel held by liberal Spanish forces that was taken by the French troops sent by Charles X, in 1823. The battle was commemorated in the Place du Trocadéro, Paris, and the monumental glamour of the Parisian site has given rise to a variety of locales bearing its name.

In London the Trocadero Restaurant of J. Lyons and Co. opened in 1896 in Shaftesbury Avenue, near the theatres of the West End. It offered magnificent cuisine in building constructed in an Opera Baroque style, and the various Trocaderos of the English-speaking world have derived their names from this original, the epitome of grand Edwardian catering.

Consequently, Trocadero is the name of several restaurants and clubs throughout the world: see Trocadero (disambiguation).

[edit] History of the Trocadero Transfer

The Trocadero Transfer was founded by Dick Collier. The club stayed open on Saturday nights until 6AM. The entire Golden Gate Business Association (San Francisco's Gay business assocation) had to go down to the San Francisco Board of Permit Appeals to make sure that the Trocadero got its after hours license, and even then it was a while before the club was allowed to serve alcohol after hours. [1] People came to the Trocadero after the I-Beam closed at 2AM, and after the Trocadero closed at 6AM, those who still wanted to dance could after 1980 go to The EndUp, which opened at 6AM Sunday morning.

[edit] Description of the Trocadero Transfer dance space

Somewhat off-center of the dance floor, there was a narrow metal spiral staircase with clear plastic arms that went up from the dance floor to the balcony above where people could watch the dancers below. This spiral staircase was sometimes called The Crystal Staircase. ("Crystal Staircase" is a slang term used by gay African Americans. It refers to situations where someone has an easy life [someone who is born wealthy, has received a large inheritance, has gotten a job that is a sinecure, etc.]. Of course, crystal also refers to methamphetamine, which many patrons of the club took to stay up all night dancing.) Gender illusionists made a great show of ascending or descending the crystal staircase.

Hanging from the ceiling at the center of the dance floor, there was the hypnotic mirror ball cluster--about a dozen mirror balls of varous sizes which continually spun around and were the focus of the dance floor[2].

[edit] DJ's who played at the Trocadero Transfer

It is said by many who reminisce about the Trocadero that the golden age of the Trocadero was between 1978 and 1981 before it became more commercialized and the music became less disco music and more modern rock. [3] Some of the DJs who played at the Trocadero included Bobby Viteritti (the primary DJ at the Trocadero when it was at its zenith from 1978 to 1981) [4], Gary Tighe, Michael Whitehead, Michael Lewis, Billy Langenheim, Steve Smith, Ralph Zepeda, Rob Kimbel, Michael Garrett, and Steve Fabus.

[edit] Disco parties at the Trocadero

There were many disco parties (the smaller, local one-night predecessors in the late 1970s and during the 1980s of what became after 1990 the much larger multi-day circuit parties) at the Trocadero. The names of some of these parties were the White Party (held Easter weekend), the Black Party (held the weekends before Walpurgis night and Halloween, at which many danced in skimpy black leather outfits), and the Red Party (held the weekend before Valentine's Day). At the height of the AIDS epidemic, because fewer people were going out dancing, from 1987 to 1989, the Trocadero was partially closed down and only hosted Disco Parties and special events.

[edit] Clubs at the Trocadero 1989-2000

In the spring of 1989, San Francisco gay dance party promoter Gus Bean began his first house music club at the Trocadero, the Crew Club.

A couple of times in the early 1990s, San Francisco's first massive rave, the Toontown Club was held at the Trocadero.

The most notoriously infamous club to be held at the Trocadero in the 1990s was the Bondage a Go-Go. This fetish club began on Wednesday nights in early 1993 and continued at the Trocadero until 2000, when it moved to the Cat Club on Wednesday nights at 1190 Folsom Street near 8th St. Then in 2004 it moved back to the Glas Kat (the successor nightclub to the Trocadero at 520 4th St.), where it continues to be held every Wednesday to this day (2007).

In 1995 and 1996, the Temple Club, a gay nightclub, was held at the Trocadero Transfer on Saturday nights.

[edit] Trocadero nostalgia parties since 2000

When the Trocadero was remodeled in 2000 and renamed the Glas Kat, the Crystal Staircase was removed.

Since 2000 a number of Trocadero Transfer disco nostalgia events have been held at the Glas Kat. These are called the Play Party and the Remember the Party parties. At these parties, the original sound of the Trocadero in the the late 1970s and early 1980s is reproduced by today's DJ's (this time with go-go boxes to dance on for those so inclined, which did not exist in the original Trocadero). The Remember the Party party (produced by Chris Njirich) includes as one of its DJ's the DJ Steve Fabus, who played at the original Trocadero Transfer during the 1980's. [1]

[edit] References

  1. ^ Diebold, David Tribal Rites:San Francisco's Dance Music Phenomenon Northridge, California:1986--Time Warp Publishing Page 128
  2. ^ Diebold, David Tribal Rites:San Francisco's Dance Music Phenomenon Northridge, California:1986--Time Warp Publishing Page 129--picture of the hypnotic mirror ball cluster
  3. ^ Diebold, David Tribal Rites:San Francisco's Dance Music Phenomenon Northridge, California:1986--Time Warp Publishing Page 128
  4. ^ Diebold, David Tribal Rites:San Francisco's Dance Music Phenomenon Northridge, California:1986--Time Warp Publishing Page 154


[edit] Further reading

  • Diebold, David Tribal Rites:San Francisco's Dance Music Phenomenon Northridge, California:1986--Time Warp Publishing--"Trocadero Transfer" Pages 128-143.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

[2]--Pictures of the Trocadero and reminiscences about the Trocadero from the website discomusic.com.