Posts Tagged ‘Vee Jay Records’

The Colored Musicians' Club, Buffalo nan turpin photographs

The Colored Musicians Club, Buffalo
nan turpin photographs

This otherwise unremarkable two-story brick storefront, with its neighboring couple of buildings and businesses, is what’s left on a Buffalo block that was pretty near urban renewed out of existence, like a lot of neighborhoods across the country.  Chicago lost some of the best parts of what it was by civic “improvement” in the 1960s and ’70s and proved it didn’t need a Robert Moses to do it.  

Today in Chicago we’re seeing a new style of fragmented urban renewal roll through the city.  One of the new-style urban renewal tools is re-designating entire neighborhoods or individual blocks and buildings “tear downs.”  

Even in the essays of Chicago’s main architecture critic we see a casual way of assuming the current real estate speculation is beneficial to the city.  Startlingly inflated property values are commonly referred to as a good way to improve the city’s revenue stream and take pressure off under-funded public pension plans.

One way or another real estate speculation right now is forcing people to leave their neighborhoods and forcing them to the edges of the city and then out.  Real estate speculation is not adding value to the city and relieving the burden of the tax rolls.  At least we can consider it is part of a new rhetoric in the service of the new-style urban renewal.

Primary Source recently looked into what Buffalonians are trying to do to revive their town.  The Queen City has a lot of problems, just one being the loss of nearly half its population in recent decades.  One of the things the civic core seem to agree on right now is reviving their historical sites, including recent 20th century history places, helps natives and newcomers alike give deeper meaning to the city they are choosing to stay in.

The Colored Musicians Club is just one historical monument that might, in another city, like Chicago, say, be just a two-story brick storefront, architecturally unremarkable, one of the last buildings standing on a block that wants something “else” to be there.  Read the Club’s historical plaque (photo below) and continue their history on the Club’s website.  

What saved this building and institution is continuity of ownership and oversight by a group, the Club, that kept what they had a live part of Buffalo.  They rented the ground floor to the African American Musicians Union for a while.  During segregation the building, the Club and union hall downstairs, were a place for black jazz musicians to play and meet.  

After the Civil Rights Law was applied in 1969 and segregated unions were required to integrate, black musicians found themselves in minority voting positions.  That’s when control of real estate, like the Buffalo club became even more important to black musicians.  Read that post-integration section of their website’s history link for an excellent summary of what black musicians were up against once “things got better.”  

The Club continued to run the top floor as a music club and after hours joint where jazz talent, the famous and local players, could mix and jam.  Music was music, all were welcome and this modest two-story brick was a place where culture changed and bright ideas made it into horn and keyboard while Buffalo slept.

During our recent Buffalo discovery trip, Primary Source was pleased to have a private tour of the Club by its 15-year president, George Scott.  He’s the man behind the bar in the picture below.  Mr. Scott gave us further detail of how the Club made it into the 21st century to be acknowledged in Buffalo as a destination for locals and international visitors alike.  

In recent years the Club re-structured itself into a not-for-profit, that gatekeeper structure for institutional survival in the United States.  They tended to their physical plant with method and fund-raising campaigns and made the building whole.  And they run a full weekly program of shows, of music classes for kids.  

The Museum downstairs is very recent, designed by the firm that did the 9/11 museum in New York.  Mr. Scott says they are proud of the museum and especially proud that its numerous listening posts give visitors complete jazz compositions, not just a 15-second teaser.  Their series of headphones are a place in Buffalo to get lost in the work of your favorite artists or to be knocked off your feet by something new to you.  They back the music up with interviews and photographs of the artists when they can.  It’s a wonderful strange kind of museum that makes you feel like you’re in a nightclub and it’s 1946 or 1935 while you never forget it’s 2014 outside. 

George Scott always puts the Club in its neighborhood context.  The Michigan Street Baptist Church and Nash House behind it,  just around the corner from the Club, were the very last stop in the Underground Railway that hid fugitive slaves and got many across the water to Canada.  And down the street there’s another old building with the African-American Cultural Center, dance, theatre, people.  Buffalo was a major center for black intellectuals and political strategists throughout the 19th century.  The Niagara Movement had its first meeting in Buffalo in 1905, just one example.  The Colored Musicians Club and some of its brother and sister institutions in town are part of what keeps a distinguished intellectual and political and artistic production of people in a place vital today.  That two-story brick on Broadway.

There are big gaps on these blocks where the life was torn out for a progress that still hasn’t come. But they’ll be rebuilt and these few vigorous historical and cultural outfits are there, in Buffalo, to make sure that the neighborhood comes back for the people who made it to begin with.  

This history has nothing to do with nostalgia and everything to do with keeping palpable a dynamic past in the dynamic present.  This is is a complex, delicate work to be doing.  These aren’t historic “trappings;” they are the inescapable prelude to the present.  

Consider our cities haunted in ways we can use.

Now back to Chicago.  It has a Historic Landmarks Commission, as we know. That body was formed in 1957 and about a decade later the landmarking Ordinance was drafted (link below).  There were revisions in 1987, 1997, 1999 as is the nature of that kind of document.  

Click to the Ordinance link and see for yourself, roughly pages 1 and 2, the criteria for landmarking.  Architectural significance is far from the only criterion.  A building like Vee Jay Records might make a case for landmarking, it seems.  

The problem is who would want to do it?  Probably not the owner.  Certainly not an owner that currently thinks they can get $1.2million.  Nobody would pay that much for history.  

There’s a west Loop neighborhood right now, the Randolph-Fulton Market District, that’s in the midst of a slow-motion slug-fest over historic landmarking for their entire district.  Property owners fear it, arguing it would snatch potentially high sales prices they think they could get from the google-spawn tech companies nibbling at those blocks and warehouses.  Historic landmarking, they fear, means layers of regulation preventing owners from making the best dollar decisions they can for adding value.  

Those who want to protect their neighborhood’s past and identity a little with historic district landmarking say not so.  They argue owners can still make profitable changes to landmarked buildings and get incentives for restoration and, if they want to sell, still make a very attractive profit.  No one believes the other guy.  A few blocks east, from over here in the Loop, it looks like they’re at a stand-off.  

Vee Jay Records needs help.  That’s one thing that’s clear.  What’s going to happen to it?  If it sells (probably way below $1.2million) in the current feeding frenzy in that part of the South Loop, it might be knocked down and fast.  Then there would only be the option of a historical tombstone, “This was a very important place in Chicago.  We knocked it down and buried it here, in front of this 4-star barbecue and martini club.”

DSCN1235DSCN1239 DSCN1238 DSCN1241 DSCN1242

Additional Sources:

+The Colored Musicians’ Club website is a model for websites, with video and photo archives as well as the usual kinds of website information:

http://www.coloredmusiciansclub.org/history.html

+City of Chicago Historic Landmarks Ordinance text: http://www.cityofchicago.org/content/dam/city/depts/zlup/Historic_Preservation/Publications/Chicago_Landmarks_Ordinance_2014.pdf

 

Not so's you notice nan turpin photographs

Not so’s you’d notice
nan turpin photographs

1449  South Michigan Avenue is not a historic landmark.  But it is where Vee Jay Records produced one after another blues and soul hits from the 1950s to mid 1960s.  Vee Jay made soul pay and rounded up an audience and media exposure for MoTown when it came years later.  Vee Jay was the mom and pop shop that said sure, they’d take a chance on those English boys and produced the Beatles’ first U.S. records.  The Beatles’ British label had an American affiliate that declined to record the Beatles so it fell to Mr. and Mrs. Bracken on South Michigan Avenue to produce Fab 4’s  first US 45s, songs like “Love Me Do,” and “I Saw Her Standing There.”  

Vivian and James, Vee and Jay, Mr. and Mrs. Bracken were a Gary, Indiana couple who owned a record store.  They knew what made a hit and pawned something for $500 to bankroll producing their first record.  That  was also their first Top 10.  They were hitmakers and found the artists, the material and the DJs to play it until the world finally found  Vee and Jay at 1449 S. Michigan Avenue.  

For a while, Chess Records, another key black recording pioneer, was set up across the street.  One day Chess turned Jimmy Reed down and all he had to do was cross the street to ask Mr. and Mrs. B. if they were interested.  Those people, their art and business and that little stretch of South Michigan Avenue in Chicago changed popular culture in North America and around the world.   Vee Jay went bankrupt in 1966 and their catalogue has been sold back and forth several times including again last week (NYT July 8, 2014 article) to Concord Music Group.  It’s a 5,000 title asset, an Ali Baba’s treasure of some of the best songs ever imagined.  Songs that make us shiver to think of a world without songs like “The Duke of Earl” All of this out of 1449 S. Michigan Avenue.

 The two-story 1920s building has been for sale for a while now.  If you check current real estate listings you’ll see someone wants $1.2million for 1449 S. Michigan Avenue.  That’s what they’re asking.  Here’s the text their broker posted for the old Vee Jay Records building:  “Existing building can be torn down.  The former home of vee jay records [Vee Jay Records].  Air rights have been purchased over the building-you can build the height of 1438.  Building has no landmark status.”  

That’s how the broker pitches this property today.   Building has no landmark status.  Vee Jay Records.  You can tear it down.  Air rights.  Vee Jay Records is on the air.  Further search turns up an old real estate listing from 2012.  A different real estate broker had the listing for 1449 two years ago and they show an asking of $750,000.  Their description was this:  “2-story vacant office/retail building for sale in heart of South Loop.  Building priced to move at $750,000.  Twenty-five feet of Michigan Avenue frontage, close to Loop, this building perfectly suited for office space or retail.”  That was two years ago.  1449 sold that year for $425,000 after 126 days on the market.  Now, two years later, the new owners’ are asking $1.2million.  What’s happened?

Last year a pair of important Chicago institutions, the Metropolitan Pier and Exposition Authority and DePaul University, made public their project for part of the neighborhood just a few blocks south of old Vee Jay Records.  Chicago Plan Commission approved the projects for construction.  Here’s what’s planned for the immediate south of Vee Jay:  DePaul’s 4-story “event center” – primarily a basketball arena with large seating capacity.  The Pier Authority that runs the major national trade shows at nearby McCormick Place, intends to get a 50+ story Marriott Marquis Hotel near that.  As well Chicago’s “Motor Row” a landmarked historic district very close to these sites, has had speculative activity up and down its short blocks and there’s neighborhood buzz of fancy restaurants and boutiques to service both the tourist trade and all the new people, both residential and leisure crowds that come into the “new” neighborhood.  Vee Jay Records modest two story is on the edge of all this dollar fever.

This might explain a little the difference between the 2012 real estate listing and asking price (and we don’t forget back then they wanted $750k and got $425k) and this year’s hefty $1.2million asking.  As they say in real estate, asking’s not getting.  Two years ago the brokers made no reference to history and did not name Vee Jay.  History was irrelevant to the sale of what was fit to be a compact office building.  

Now history is at the heart of the realtor’s pitch.  But here’s how:  now the price tag seems inflated to reflect the historical significance of the property.  BUT, but, the beauty of this purchase, the ad seems to suggest, is that for $1.2million you can buy all that history, then tear it down, then build up and up.  This is complicated and disturbing.  Primary Source doesn’t know really what it means, but it has a sinister note to it.  

There’s some comfort though.  This is a big town and some people have been keeping close watch over the Vee Jay Records building.  The Carl Davis Foundation has, for several years, been working to raise money to buy the building for a music museum.  Carl Davis was a major American record producer, the kind of producer who helps create the “sound” of a time.   What Davis created was “The Chicago Sound” like “The Duke of Earl” and “Your Love Keeps Lifting me Higher.”  

When he died in 2012 the Chicago Sun-Times ran a richly detailed obituary (August 9, 2012).  One year earlier the Sun-Times ran a story (May 19) about a project of musicians and the Carl Davis Foundation to raise money to buy the building.  In 2011 the building was for sale and listed at $925,000. In 2011, according to the Sun-Times story at least, those involved were looking to the “new” mayor Rahm Emmanuel to favor their proposal to turn the Vee Jay premises into a museum that would mark Chicago as the precursor city to soul music.  Now it’s 2014 and that same mayor has eyes for the DePaul and Pier Authority grand scale money magnets slightly south.  

Contrary to the claim by one public official in a recent city hall meeting, history can be bought and sold.  Our cities and towns are perplexed by the speed and extent history can be bought and sold, sometimes to be co-opted, sometimes to be erased for its “footprint.”  What to do about history is becoming a central problem in the places we live and there are no simple answers.  

For example, we take the example of Chess Records, in its early days  Vee Jay’s neighbor.  The Chess Records building was similarly threatened a while back, of being sold to the “wrong” buyer who might destroy it in view of a higher purpo$e.  The family of a well-loved blues musician managed to buy the building, saved it, turned it into a music museum.  Happy ending?  Some say no.  

Those close to the old Chess Records say the name of Chess has been obliterated by the little museum.  Primary Source has not yet visited to see for herself.  If it turns out true, that you’d never know it was Chess if you didn’t know it was Chess, this reporter has a hunch (from reading too many French novels) that there are very interesting reasons for the lapse.   Just to say what to do about History is an infernal question that mere mortals are having a tough time with these days.

…come back tomorrow for Part 2. of this series, TWO TOWNS AND TIME.  We’ll return to Buffalo for a look at what they did in a similar situation. 

Additional Sources:

+(on the Beatles and Vee Jay) http://www.dermon.com/beatles/veejay.html http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=13774728

+Wikipedia entry for “Soul Music” and Chicago, for a survey of the early record labels including Vee Jay and Chess

 

+Carl Davis Foundation and Vee Jay:  http://www.suntimes.com/lifestyles/hoekstra/5476813-452/historic-brunswick-and-vee-jay-building-may-house-museum-working-studio.html#.U8KlgI1dVa8

+Carl Davis Sun-Time obituary, Carl Davis Foundation:  http://www.suntimes.com/news/obituaries/14373356-418/soul-music-producer-carl-davis-architect-of-the-chicago-sound-dies-at-77.html#.U8K6T41dVa8

+DSCN1831