- published: 08 Jun 2016
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Eddie Condon's was the name of three successive jazz venues in New York run by jazz banjoist, guitarist, and bandleader Eddie Condon from 1945 until the mid-1980s. In 1975, Red Balaban took over the management of the club.Ed Polcer was also a part-owner at the time of the club's closing.
The first venue was located on West 3rd Street in Greenwich Village. The club then moved to 52nd Street near Sixth Avenue, the present site of the CBS headquarters building, The final venue was on the south side of East 54th Street, east of Second Avenue.
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Condon toured Britain in 1957 with a band including Wild Bill Davison, Cutty Cutshall, Gene Schroeder and George Wettling. His last tour was in 1964, when he took a band to Australia and Japan. Condon's men, on that tour, were a roll-call of top mainstream jazz musicians: Buck Clayton (trumpet), Pee Wee Russell (clarinet), Vic Dickenson (trombone), Bud Freeman (tenor sax), Dick Carey (piano and alto horn), Jack Lesberg (bass), Cliff Leeman (drums), Jimmy Rushing (vocals). A nice touch was that Billy Banks, a vocalist who had recorded with Condon and Pee Wee Russell in 1932, and had lived in obscurity in Japan for many years, turned up at one of the 1964 concerts: Pee Wee asked him "have you got any more gigs?". In 1948 his autobiography We Called It Music was published. The book has many ...
Proto-Elvis JOHNNY RAY invents white rock at Eddie Condon’s nightclub at West 3rd Street in Greenwich Village, 1951. The line-up: Wild Bill Davison, cornet; Cutty Cutshall, trombone; Edmond Hall, clarinet; Gene Schroeder, piano; Eddie Condon, guitar; Buzzy Drootin, drums; Bob Casey, bass; Dolores Hawkins & Johnny Ray, vocals. Transferred from 16mm.
Description : Club de Jazz Eddie Condon’s situé à Greenwich Village, NYC. Date : 1946-00-00 Images commercialisées par l'atelier des archives http://www.atelierdesarchives.com
Bud Freeman & His Orch - Midnight At Eddie Condon's
~1940 - Lee Wiley, Vocals From a Time article, 1945: Eddie Condon once tried to tell a New York Daily Newsman, in the plainest language he could muster, about his troubles in making the "real jazz" pay enough for tea for two, or keep body & soul together night & day: "We bled to death. We were eating off each other's wrists. We had one paper hat right on the hook but when we mentioned money he jumped back in the icebox." Another potential sponsor died during negotiations: "He went cool on us. They had to throw dirt on him." Born: November 16, 1905 | Died: 1973 Instrument: Guitar (from allaboutjazz.com) Eddie Condon was one of the young 'White' Chicagoans who, during the 1920s, were instrumental in creating a new, hard driving type of "Chicago Dixieland Jazz". His career started at just ...
The classic Condon band really wails on this 1952 broadcast with Edmond Hall, Wild Bill Davidson, Cliff Leeman, Cutty Cutshall, Gene Schroeder and Bob Casey.
Albert Edwin Condon (16 November 1905 -- 4 August 1973), better known as Eddie Condon, was a jazz banjoist, guitarist, and bandleader. A leading figure in the so-called "Chicago school" of early Dixieland, he also played piano and sang on occasion. Condon was born in Goodland, Indiana. After some time playing ukulele, he switched to banjo and was a professional musician by 1921. He was based in Chicago for most of the 1920s, and played with such jazz notables as Bix Beiderbecke, Jack Teagarden and Frank Teschemacher. In 1928 Condon moved to New York City. He frequently arranged jazz sessions for various record labels, sometimes playing with the artists he brought to the recording studios, including Louis Armstrong and Fats Waller. He organised racially-integrated recording sessions - whe...
Description : Club de Jazz Eddie Condon’s situé à Greenwich Village, NYC. Date : 1946-00-00 Images commercialisées par l'atelier des archives http://www.atelierdesarchives.com
Can't we hear the hurting they are asking
Where is there good in this world
We've seen it in print but there's no one to show it
Will you understand you're not the only ones who suffer
And suffer we will
The cutting wind has its way of killing hope when its so cold
We wonder as we sit around could we be meant for something greater
There's no hope for change when we can't see the needs of others before our own
And now must our faces be set as stone
Always forcing us against each other
So let us be the first to stand and say but not as if we were faultless
That we cant move on unless we forgive
We can forgive
We have to let it go
It's the arrogance we have to let it go
This is our greatest need