Jazz club

Jazz
Stylistic origins: Blues • Folk • March • Ragtime
Cultural origins: Early 1910s New Orleans
Typical instruments: Saxophone · Clarinet · Flute · Vibraphone · Trumpet · Piano · Guitar · Banjo · Tuba · Double bass · Bass guitar · Vocals  · Trombone · Drum kit
Mainstream popularity: 1920s–1960s
Derivatives: Jump blues • Rhythm and blues  • Rock and roll  • Ska  • Reggae  • Funk
Subgenres
Asian American jazz • Avant-garde jazz • Bebop • Big band • Chamber jazz • Continental jazz • Cool jazz • Free jazz • Gypsy jazz • Hard Bop • Latin jazz • Mainstream jazz • M-Base • Neo-bop • Orchestral jazz • Post-bop • Soul jazz • Stride • Swing • Third stream • Traditional jazz • Traditional pop • Vocal jazz
Fusion genres
Acid jazz • Afrobeat • Bluegrass • Bossa nova • Crossover jazz • Dansband • Free funk • Humppa • Jam band • Jazzcore • Jazz funk • Jazz fusion • Jazz rap • Kwela • Livetronica • Mambo • Manila Sound • Nu jazz • Nu soul • Punk jazz • Shibuya-kei • Ska jazz • Smooth jazz • Swing revival • World fusion • Yé-yé
Regional scenes
Australia • Azerbaijan • Brazil • Cuba • France • Germany • India • Italy • Japan • Malawi • Netherlands • Poland • South Africa • Spain • United Kingdom
Local scenes
Cape Town • Kansas City • New Orleans • West Coast
Jazz musicians
Bassists • Clarinetists • Drummers • Guitarists • Organists • Pianists • Saxophonists • Trombonists • Trumpeters
Other topics
Jazz standard • Jazz royalty • Jazz (word) • Jazz clubs • Jazz drumming

A jazz club is a venue where the primary entertainment is the performance of live jazz music. Jazz clubs have been in large rooms in the eras of Orchestral jazz and big band jazz and when its popularity as a dance music was common. With the transition to styles like Bebop and later, played by smaller numbers of musicians such as quartets and trios smaller clubs became practical.

Contemporarily such venues may be found in the basement of larger residential buildings, or as simple storefront locations. They can be rather small compared to other music venues, reflecting the intimate atmosphere of jazz concerts and long term decline in interest in Jazz.[1] Despite being called "clubs", these venues are usually not exclusive.

References

See also