The Montreal Jazz Scene

The Montreal Jazz Scene

Montréal was one of the few places in North America where you could still buy alcohol legally. The city’s unofficial theme song was the 1928 Irving Berlin Co. chart topper “Hello Montréal!”, which summed up the sentiments of thirsty tourists: “Goodbye Broadway, hello Montréal / I’m on my way, I’m on my way / And I’ll make whoop-whoop whoopee night and day!”

Gamblers, racketeers and the world’s greatest entertainers – especially American jazz musicians – flocked to Montréal, notably between the two world wars when Montréal’s Little Burgundy neighbourhood was dubbed the “Harlem of the North.”

Montréal quickly became the nightclub capital of Canada, and her fabled Sin-City era would continue well into the 1950s.

Today, Montréal remains a hotbed of jazz. The city is home to the world’s largest jazz festival as well as live music in the city’s swinging jazz clubs seven nights a week. While Montréal’s Sin City heyday is behind her, Montrealers still love letting the good times roll long after most other cities have rolled up their sidewalks and gone to bed.

Jazz, a style of American music birthed in New Orleans around the turn of the 20th century, migrated north to Montréal, hometown of global jazz icon Oscar Peterson, Maynard Ferguson and Oliver Jones.

Montréal became home to countless jazz nightclubs such as the famous Rockhead’s Paradise, a three-storey show bar located on the corner of de la Montagne and Saint-Antoine Streets. Founded by Rufus Rockhead in 1928, Rockhead’s Paradise was where Louis Armstrong went after performing at the Montréal Forum or uptown clubs, and it was where Ella Fitzgerald made her Montréal début in 1943.

Just around the corner from Rockhead’s on de la Montagne Street was another popular Black club, the Café St-Michel, home of Louis Metcalf’s International Band. Metcalf had been a trumpeter with Duke Ellington and Jelly Roll Morton before bringing bebop to Montréal.

Pianist Oliver Jones, a former protégé of his idol Oscar Peterson, was just 10 years old when he first performed at the Café St-Michel in 1944.

Mr. Jones once told me, “It was across the street from Rockhead’s Paradise, which was the first Black-owned club in all of Canada. The St-Michel was a little rougher. Rufus Rockhead never let anything get out of hand although there was always pressure from authorities to close him down. But I remember playing in the St-Michel and saw a lot of what I wasn’t supposed to see – girly girls and strippers. But the people there, there was always someone looking out for me.”

During Montréal’s 1920s to 1950s golden age of jazz, everybody from Dizzy Gillespie to Duke Ellington made their way to the city. Even Frank Sinatra headlined Chez Paree on Stanley Street during a residency there in 1953.

Jazz declined in popularity in the 1960s thanks to the rise of rock’n’roll but bounced back in Montréal when legendary impresario Rouè-Doudou Boicel founded the Rising Sun Celebrity Jazz Club in 1975. The club was located on Sainte-Catherine Street, opposite where the Festival International de Jazz de Montréal’s Maison du Festival is located today, in the Quartier des spectacles.

“My deepest friends who helped me were Taj Mahal, Buddy Guy, Art Blakey, John Lee Hooker and Dizzy Gillespie, who came to Montréal whenever I needed money,” Boicel told me. “That was a guarantee my place was packed.”

Boicel also founded the short-lived Rising Sun Festijazz at Place des Arts in 1978 – presenting everybody from Sarah Vaughan to Dexter Gordon – before the Festival International de Jazz de Montréal was established in 1980.

The Rising Sun is gone now, as are Montreal’s famed Sin City-era jazz clubs like the Café St-Michel. Rockhead’s Paradise closed in 1980. But a vibrant local jazz scene has grown alongside the Festival International de Jazz de Montréal, which is very supportive of local musicians.

Festival International de Jazz de Montréal
The arrival of the Festival International de Jazz de Montréal in 1980 signaled a new era of Montréal jazz. Many jazz clubs have opened since and are especially busy during the festival.

Each year the ten-day jazz festival books some of the biggest acts in the music business, showcasing some 3,000 musicians from 30 countries headlining 500 indoor and outdoor concerts – ticketed and free – on 20 stages.

The Festival International de Jazz de Montréal is the world’s largest according to Guinness World Records, and each year begins during the last week of June.

Upstairs Jazz Bar & Grill
Close to the major hotels downtown and popular with tourists, the intimate Upstairs Jazz Bar & Grill books local musicians such as renowned drummer Jim Doxas, blues queen Dawn Tyler Watson and soul legend Michelle Sweeney.

Jazz royalty performing at Upstairs over the years includes international headliners Sheila Jordan, Jimmy Heath, Joe Lovano, former Oscar Peterson drummer Alvin Queen, Jeff Healey and jazz legend Ranee Lee, who recorded her Juno Award-winning live album at Upstairs.

Upstairs was the first off-site jazz club to be part of the Festival International de Jazz de Montréal, hosts regular jam nights for jazz musicians attending McGill and Concordia universities, and is ranked by Downbeat Magazine as one of the top jazz clubs in the world.

Dièse Onze Jazz & Restaurant
Dièse Onze, in the hip Plateau district, is very intimate, looks and feels exactly like a classic jazz club should, and features live music every night by such musical guests as Juno Award-winning soul diva Kim Richardson and the popular groove and improvisation-fueled collective The Brooks. DownBeat Magazine ranks Dièse Onze as one of the top jazz clubs in the world.

Modavie
Located in Old Montréal, Modavie is a French bistro that features live jazz and blues seven evenings a week, showcasing local performers. The old-school jazz feel is accentuated by the bistro’s stone and wood décor.

Montréal Jazz History Walking Tour
During the jazz fest each year, professional tour guide Leah Blythe presents her popular Montréal Jazz History Walking Tour. The two-hour tour through downtown Montréal tells the story of jazz and its connection to the city from the 1920s until the foundation of the Festival International de Jazz de Montréal in 1980. You’ll see what has become of such former clubs as Rockhead’s Paradise, the Rising Sun and Chez Paree. For more information about the walking tour during the jazz festival and year-round, email Blythe at leah.m.blythe@gmail.com.
-Richard Burnett

Tracks

Artist Track Title
Al Baculis Singers Never My Love Happy Together
Oliver Jones Young and Foolish Live at Biddle's
Billy Martin One More Time I Turn You On
Dave Turner Quartet It Could Happen to You The Pulse Brothers
Oscar Peterson The Personal Touch (Oscar Peterson) The Personal Touch
Compilation Paolo Noël - Carré Saint-Louis Montréal: Un Portrait Musical
Paul Bley Trio Nothing Ever Was Anyway ST
Al Baculis Singers So What's New? ST
Marius Cultier Donne-moi un p'tit bec À la Place des Arts
Compilation Ted Lewis and His Band - Hello Montreal! (Que Hay Montreal!) (1928) Columbia 1346 Hello Montreal!
Henri Noël Pierre Will Come A Day One More Step
Pierre Leduc Entre ciel et terre Renaître
Billy Martin Good Luck Round About Midnight
Lee Gagnon Visage (The Face) Le Jazze
Paul Bley Trio Paul ST
Oscar Peterson Things Ain't What They Used To Be Night Train
Paul Bley Pig Foot Blood
Lucio Agostini Tico-Tico Mucho Lucio: Latin American Music Arranged And Conducted by Lucio Agostini
Lucio Agostini Brazil Mucho Lucio: Latin American Music Arranged And Conducted by Lucio Agostini
Oliver Jones You Are Too Beautiful Live at Biddle's
The Brian Browne Trio What Now My Love Listen, People!
Neil Chotem Mon ange joli Themes and Melodies Volume 1
Pierre Leduc Les berceuses Renaître
Billy Martin Walk on the Wildside Doin' Their Thing
Billy Martin Let Them Talk Knock On Wood (with Rickey Day)
Johnny Holmes Orchestra If I Ruled the World Ray Berthiaume and Margo McKinnon, vocalists
The Brian Browne Trio More Listen, People!
Oscar Peterson Swinging Shepherd Blues (Moe Koffman) The Personal Touch
Gordie Fleming Proud Mary (John Fogerty) Gordie Fleming's "Big Little Band" (Montreal Instrumental)
Oscar Peterson I Got It Bad And That Ain't Good Night Train
Billy Martin Funky Feelin' Strawberry Soul
Neil Chotem Gypsy Plays the Songs of Gordon Lightfoot
Paul Bley Seven Blood
Billy Martin Egg Roll Strawberry Soul
Al Baculis Singers Echoes of Lisa Concentrate On You
Billy Martin Baby I'm for Real I Turn You On
Oliver Jones Fly Me to the Moon Live at Biddle's
Johnny Holmes Orchestra With Apologies to Woody Ray Berthiaume and Margo McKinnon, vocalists
Compilation The Jazz Pilots - Hello Montreal (Que Hay Montreal!) (1928) Okeh 41021 Hello Montreal!
Paul Bley When Will The Blues Leave Footloose
Sonny Greenwich Quartet Night and Day Bird of Paradise
Concept Neuf Ta Samba ST
Neil Chotem Siboney Monique Leyrac, vocalist
Oscar Peterson Easy Does It Night Train
Marius Cultier Les araignées De La Martinique
Lucio Agostini Caprice Canadien Action With Agostini
Maynard Ferguson Almost Like Being in Love Maynard Ferguson and His Orchestra (live at the Expo '67 Canadian Pavillion Theatre)
George Walker Goin' Out of My Head James Last Presents George Walker
Vic Vogel Shadow of Your Smile and Yesterday Montreal Bandleader
Lucio Agostini Black Rose (Lucio Agostini) Cold Shoulder and Hot Brass
Billy Martin This Love Of Mine Billy's Dance Party
Lee Gagnon Skin Dance Jazzzzz
Oscar Peterson French Fiddler Trail of Dreams: A Canadian Suite
Concept Neuf Bellavia ST
Lee Gagnon Rêve Jérémie Soundtrack
Neil Chotem Girl Talk Neil Chotem Orchestra
Lee Gagnon Leanna Le Jazze
Neil Chotem Brouillard Lucille Dumont and Robert Demontigny, vocalists
Paul Bley Trio Blood ST
Lucio Agostini A Banda Cold Shoulder and Hot Brass
Maynard Ferguson Never You Mind Around the Horn with
Neil Chotem Is It Over Now? Themes and Melodies Volume 2
Neil Chotem Wherefore and Why Plays the Songs of Gordon Lightfoot
Maynard Ferguson Take the "A" Train Maynard Ferguson and His Orchestra (live at the Expo '67 Canadian Pavillion Theatre)
Lee Gagnon Ode to the Ode Jazzzzz
Phil Nimmons Group Feed the Birds (Tuppence a Bag) Mary Popppins Swings
Claude Léveillée & André Gagnon Douze II Léveillée - Gagnon
Lee Gagnon Ah! si mon moine Vive la Canadienne
Neil Chotem Crossroads Plays the Songs of Gordon Lightfoot
Art Maiste Bach and the Blues At the Piano
Pierre Leduc et son Quatuor Tonus ST
Johnny Holmes Orchestra On the Street Where You Live Ray Berthiaume and Margo McKinnon, vocalists
Billy Martin Exodus Doin' Their Thing
Maynard Ferguson Hymn to Her Dimensions
Henri Noël Pierre Merci bon dieu Piano
Neil Chotem And Now, It's For Sure Themes and Melodies Volume 2
Billy Martin Till The Mellow Sax Of John Scott
Neil Chotem Lazy Afternoon Monique Leyrac, vocalist
Billy Martin Moonglow The Mellow Sax Of John Scott
Neil Chotem Pussywillows, Cat-Tails Plays the Songs of Gordon Lightfoot
Lee Gagnon Les passants du soir Jérémie Soundtrack
Paul Bley Gargantuan Encounter Dual Unity (with Annette Bley)
Concept Neuf Roda maxixe (La danse ronde) Concept Neuf
Johnny Holmes Orchestra Put Your Hand in the Hand (Gene MacLellan) 17-piece Montreal Orchestra
Billy Martin Bye Bye Black Bird Knock On Wood (with Rickey Day)
Phil Nimmons Group The Life I Lead Mary Popppins Swings
Claude Léveillée & André Gagnon Baie des sable Léveillée - Gagnon
Phil Nimmons Group Step in Time Mary Popppins Swings
Marius Cultier Les seins du paradis À la Place des Arts
Henri Noël Pierre Azaka Piano
Marius Cultier Coco Boogaloo De La Martinique
The Brian Browne Trio Yeserday Listen, People!
Claude Léveillée & André Gagnon Carousel Léveillée - Gagnon
Neil Chotem When The World Was Young (Lucille Dumont, vocals) Lucille Dumont and Robert Demontigny, vocalists
Oscar Peterson The World is Waiting for the Sunrise (Ernest Seitz) The Personal Touch
Paul Bley I Want to be Happy Paul Bley
Paul Bley Only Sweetly Blood
Paul Bley Nothing Ever Was, Anyway Blood
Neil Chotem Charade (Robert Demontigny, vocalist) Lucille Dumont and Robert Demontigny, vocalists
Sonny Greenwich Quintet Starlight: Diligence-the Struggle of the Seeker; Peace-at the Temple Gate; Joy-in the Presence of the Master Sun Song: 'The Music of Sonny Greenwich'

Compilation

ST

ST

Canadian All Stars - ST BACK

Canadian All Stars - ST BACK

17-piece Montreal Orchestra

The Brian Browne Trio (split with The Doug Randle Orchestra)

Listen, People!

Browne, Brian Trio

Lucio Agostini - Once Upon a Hundred Years

Mucho Lucio: Latin American Music Arranged And Conducted by Lucio Agostini

Lucio Agostini-Action BACK

Vogel, Vic

Peterson, Oscar

Jones, Oliver

Back to Baculis

Happy Together

Al Baculis - Back to Bacus MINT BACK

Concentrate On You

ST

Baculis, Al Quintet

Baculis, Al Singers

Al Baculis Singers-Happy Together (CTL Paragon) LABEL 02

Al Baculis Singers-Happy Together (CTL Paragon) LABEL 01

Al Baculis Singers-Happy Together (CTL Paragon) BACK

45-Al Baculis - Concentrate On You VINYL 02

Action With Agostini

Cold Shoulder and Hot Brass

Once Upon a Hundred Years

Agostini, Lucio

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