EBOOK

Keystone Korner

Portrait of a Jazz Club

Kathy Sloane
(0)
Pages
264
Year
2012
Language
English

About

The award-winning photographer's pictorial history of the famous San Francisco Jazz club featuring oral histories and more than 100 images. During the 1970s, when jazz clubs across America were folding under the onslaught of rock and roll and disco, San Francisco's Keystone Korner was an oasis for jazz listeners and musicians. Tucked away in the city's North Beach area, the Keystone became one of the most important jazz spots in the United States. It was so beloved by musicians that superstars McCoy Tyner, Freddie Hubbard, Ron Carter, and Elvin Jones played a benefit concert to raise money for its liquor license. In this book, award-winning photographer Kathy Sloane shares more than 100 black and white photographs documenting the musicians and regulars, the spontaneous moments and ephemeral scene of this legendary club. Together with these images, she has compiled a fascinating collage of first-hand oral histories that chronicle the Keystone experience.

Related Subjects

Reviews

"This book, on the basis of the text alone, merits a spot on the shelf alongside the classic oral jazz histories of Nat Hentoff and Studs Terkel."
All About Jazz
"Oakland photographer Kathy Sloane has written a splendid history of the club, featuring interviews and more than 100 photographs of artists… Keystone Korner closed in 1983, but Sloane's book re-creates it in vibrant detail."
Mercury News
"Open Kathy Sloane's new book… and you can smell the cigarette smoke. Put on the accompanying CD, and you can hear Bill Evans or Stan Getz playing this cramped room in North Beach 30 or 40 years ago."
San Francisco Chronicle

Artists