Above is
an extensive article on the jazz and folk scene in Melbourne from The Age,
August 19th, 1964 by Leonard Radic, focusing on the 'vibe' of the
establishments and their patrons, as opposed to the music and musicians. As an
insight into youth night life it provides a grasp on the atmosphere prior to the changes in alcohol legislation,
that would pave the way for the 'beer barns' of the 1970's, and the growing
secularisation of youth culture. The article is also pertinent in that it was
written right on the cusp of Beatlemania - the beginning of the end for folk
and jazz as major youth currency. In Melbourne the switch towards 'rock' took
place largely within the club sphere, as discotheques quickly replaced jazz
spots and the coffee houses. Keith Glass touches on this transition in his
memoirs 'A Life in Music';
"In
the wake of the beat music explosion, every jazz club in Melbourne is changing
it’s music policy to accommodate young hopefuls with guitars and amplifiers. As
ex-jazzers (that peculiarly Melbourne cult group deserves more time/explanation
than available here) we’ve already got the long hair and therefore the jump on
the more established, instrumental based regular "rock" groups who
see this new thing as a passing fad. Soon we are working at Stonehenge in
Beaumaris, Harlem in Caulfield and Penthouse in Ormond. Mentone Rock has become
Mentone Mod, Jazz Centre 44 in St. Kilda is billing R&B nights each week,
ditto the Fat Black Pussycat in South Yarra and dances such as OddMod at Kew
Civic Centre are raking it in for the promoters while the bands are just
excited to be there."
One
example of the transition between 'jazz' and 'beat' is the aforementioned Fat
Black Pussycat, presumably the South Yarra venue mentioned in the article. Opening
as a modern jazz venue in 1963 it provided a platform for the likes of the Brian
Brown Group, The Heads (later the Bernie McGann Quartet) the Barry McKimm Trio,
the Alan Lee Quintet, the Bob Bertles Quartet, and the Heinz Mendelson Quartet.
Most were refugees from the Jazz Centre 44, in wake of clubs move towards trad
jazz after its founder, Horst Liepolt, left for Sydney. It only
lasted three years, having folding by 1966 and converting into one of
Melbournes first discotheques, with a strict 'rock only' policy.
The most 'known' of the groups that played at the Pussycat was the early incarnation of The Wild Cherries, pre-Lobby Loyde. A transitional act, members Les Gilbert & Kevin Murphy were modern jazz fans with a vogueish embrace of electrified r'n'b. Gilbert describes their experience with the venue, "The Fat Black Pussycat had been a jazz venue and was run by an American guy called Ali Sugarman – very much along the lines of a New York jazz club. With declining audiences he decided to change the music to stay in business and for some reason I can’t really remember, we were asked to perform the first night of its conversion from jazz to…I struggle with finding a word for what we called our music at the time,".
The most 'known' of the groups that played at the Pussycat was the early incarnation of The Wild Cherries, pre-Lobby Loyde. A transitional act, members Les Gilbert & Kevin Murphy were modern jazz fans with a vogueish embrace of electrified r'n'b. Gilbert describes their experience with the venue, "The Fat Black Pussycat had been a jazz venue and was run by an American guy called Ali Sugarman – very much along the lines of a New York jazz club. With declining audiences he decided to change the music to stay in business and for some reason I can’t really remember, we were asked to perform the first night of its conversion from jazz to…I struggle with finding a word for what we called our music at the time,".
(The Age, Dec 11, 1964)
(Lot's Wife, Dec 2, 1965)
Though this
gossip piece from The Age claims the venue had already moved on from jazz to
mod by '64 (presumably not the jazz loving mods though) the venue would later
be managed by Adrian Rawlins between 1965 and 1966, continuing to promote experimental jazz
and poetry until its closure.
(The Age, March 5, 1965)
(The Canberra Times, Nov 4, 1966)
(J.A. Hoffberg, "Fluxus Film and Sam: A Conversation with Jeff Perkins", 1998)
I’ve also
included what information I could find on Ali Sugarman, an elusive (shadowy
even?) figure in the narrative of jazz in Melbourne who came to tragic end. Like Horst Liepolt,
Sugarman was another transnational influence on Melbourne cultural life in the
post-war period, via the nexus of the ‘jazz club’. That he was tangentially
connected with the Fluxus scene in New York is also an intriguing point, and
may go someway towards explaining his willingness to promote the likes of Barry
McKimm during the period they were embracing techniques influenced by John Cage
and Ornette Coleman. Whilst jazz and ‘jazzers’ were the in thing I’m not
sure how far towards that end of the
spectrum audiences went (not very far, and would explain the change in booking
policy) Pianist Chuck Yates provides an insight into his 'New yoik' ways, "The club was run by Ali Sugaman, who was later shot dead in New York. He
was an incredible cat though. He was the first person I knew who would
say any word in front of anybody. At that time in Melbourne nobody swore
in front of women." I've read elsewhere that swearing in front of a 'blokes' 'girl' at that time in Australia was enough to cause a fist fight.... Perhaps The Fat Black Pussycat could be thought of as a small slice of New York in Toorak,
perhaps?
In wider
terms the shift towards rock proved disastrous in terms of commercial and
social infrastructure for modern jazz in Melbourne, unlike folk and trad jazz,
which both managed to sustain support (see W & G, East Recording Company,
Score Records, Swaggie Records, The Seekers, Trevor Lucas, Red Onion Jazz Band,
Frank Traynor etc. etc. ) The changes in taste in Melbourne away from jazz saw kept it absent from the official record. Unlike Sydney, which had the
El Rocco and the major record labels such as Columbia and EMI, Melbourne had no
venues, or labels - independent or major. Presumably this wasn't helped by the fact
that artists such as Brown, McGann and McKimm, like their counterparts in
Sydney, were at the height of their explorations in avant-garde and the 'new
thing' (I say presumably as there are few available recordings to consult) That
there no one had a little money or
interest in running something along the lines of ESP Disk is a shame as there was
enough avant-garde activity during the period to sustain something. The only supporting documentation of artists in the
1960's period that I know of are two tracks by the Bernie McGann Quartet tracks
on the Australia Jazz '67
compilation, the two EP's by the Alan Lee Quartet & Quintet from '61 and
'63, the Max Reed Trio's EP from 1963, some of the tracks on Jim Minchin's 'Move 2 Mix' album, and there is one or two 'modern' style
tunes on a live LP by Len Barnards Modern Jazz Group with Keith Hounslow on
W&G from the late 60's, though mixed in with more 'trad' styles. I've read
mention of a release by the Brian Brown Quartert, "Live in Tasmania",
from 1969, but can't find any evidence that it actually exists. There are also
archival recordings of McKimm along with Robert Rooney and Syd Clayton
available on the Artefacts of Australian Experimental Music 1930 - 1973
compilation.
The lack of venues or audience interest saw a real retreat from experimental music for several years in Melbourne, until the Carlton scene swung into life, and the establishment of the Victorian Jazz Club in 1969 provided some space for artists like Alan Lee and Brian Brown, though McKimm etc. had moved away from jazz into 'new music' circles, such as the International Society for Contemporary Music, and into the nascent experimental theatre scene around La Mama.
The lack of venues or audience interest saw a real retreat from experimental music for several years in Melbourne, until the Carlton scene swung into life, and the establishment of the Victorian Jazz Club in 1969 provided some space for artists like Alan Lee and Brian Brown, though McKimm etc. had moved away from jazz into 'new music' circles, such as the International Society for Contemporary Music, and into the nascent experimental theatre scene around La Mama.