Misplaced Pages

The Haig

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Jazz club in Hollywood, California, USA Not to be confused with The Hague.
The Haig

The Haig Dinners was a jazz club located at 638 South Kenmore Avenue in the Wilshire Distric, Los Angeles, California. Along with the Tiffany Club it was one of Los Angeles's premier jazz venues in the 1950s and strongly associated with West Coast jazz.

History

Author James Lincoln Collier describes the club as "the best-known Los Angeles jazz club of the day". It was located across from the Ambassador Hotel, which housed the famous supper club, The Cocoanut Grove. The Haig club was originally a bungalow home which was converted by owner John Bennett into a club. It has been described as looking more like a doll house than a club. In early 1952 Gerry Mulligan walked into the club and found Erroll Garner, Bobby Short, and others jamming without amplification. He joined in on an informal Monday night jam. He would later take over the jam night. Mulligan would audition and work with artists such as Chet Baker, Chico Hamilton and Bob Whitlock and many others.

In its time, Erroll Garner, Shorty Rogers, Red Norvo, Laurindo Almeida, Ornette Coleman and Bud Shank all played the club. Gerry Mulligan's first California band was formed at The Haig and maintained an eleven-month engagement there beginning in the spring of 1952. This edition of the Gerry Mulligan quartet would help to bring trumpeter Chet Baker to prominence. In its short life the pianoless quartet released several records for Richard Bock's Pacific label.

Live recordings

See also

Notes

  1. At the time, Bock was the press manager for The Haig; he hired Mulligan and his quartet. The musicians made enough of an impression on Bock to prompt him to borrow money to record the group. The recordings were the start of Bock's record company and also of Gerry Mulligan's rise to prominence.

References

  1. Collier 1995, p. 149.
  2. Starr 1991, p. 131.
  3. ^ Gioia 1998, p. 172.
  4. Gavin 2011, p. 56.
  5. ^ Goldberg 1965, pp. 15–16.

Sources

Length 496 pages

34°03′44″N 118°17′47″W / 34.0621°N 118.2964°W / 34.0621; -118.2964


Stub icon

This jazz club or venue-related article is a stub. You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it.

Categories: