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Cleveland Jazz In The Jazz Age

At the 鈥 visitors view the exhibit while the music that gives the era its name plays in the background. So what was playing in the foreground while the Jazz Age was actually taking place in Cleveland in the 1920s?

To find out, we asked Joe Mosbrook. He鈥檚 the author of the 1993 book 鈥淐leveland Jazz History鈥 and host of a weekly radio feature of the same name that鈥檚 aired on WCPN since 1988.

鈥淢usic and jazz in Cleveland in the 鈥20s was dance bands. They were not the big bands that we heard later in the 30s, the 16 or 18 piece bands, but smaller bands that were 10 or 11 pieces. They played everywhere, hotels, restaurants and places like Euclid Beach Park, Luna Park, the Aragon Ballroom was operating in those days as was Oster鈥檚 Ballroom.鈥 Mosbrook said.

Mosbrook also explained that jazz was often heard in a place you might not expect- Chinese restaurants- including the Golden Pheasant on Prospect, which had its own dance band as well as the Bamboo Garden at East 100th and Euclid.

Not everyone was so enthusiastic of this new music, including Nikolai Sokoloff, the first conductor of the Cleveland Orchestra.

鈥淗e banned them from playing jazz.鈥 Mosbrook said.

Mosbrook said the government officials also frowned on jazz on moral grounds.

鈥淭here was a city regulation enacted in 1925 that said: 鈥榁ulgar noisy jazz music is prohibited. Such music almost forces dancers to use jerky half steps and invites immoral behavior,鈥欌 he said.

The regulation, according to Mosbrook, was impossible to enforce.

Like many spaces where people gathered, spots that offered jazz were often segregated. 鈥淪ome of the ballrooms would have a band come in one night to play for a white audience and the next night for African American audiences. Some of the old musicians I talked to said there was a form of segregation beyond that, in which they would charge more for the black audience than the white audience for whatever reason,鈥 Mosbrook said.

One of the centerpieces of the CMA exhibit is Viktor Schreckengost鈥檚 鈥淭he Jazz Bowl,鈥 which he created in 1930. Mosbrook said that Shreckengost鈥檚 passion for the music extended beyond that of just a fan.

鈥淰iktor told me that he played saxophone and clarinet with the Ken Webb band. They played a number of amusement park ballrooms in the 鈥20s. This is when Viktor was an art student at what is now known as the Cleveland Institute of Art. I think his interest in jazz was reflected in designs and paintings and all of the visual art stuff he did.鈥

Joe shares stories of legendary star-crossed Jazz Age cornetist Bix Beiderbecke鈥檚 tragic times in Cleveland.