In the 1930s, French record collectors and enthusiasts of le jazz hot began record listening groups under the name of the Hot Club of France, a major institution for jazz listening and appreciation in Europe when rare imported records were scarce and threatened by the imminent rise of Fascism. Listening to jazz 78s was a communal and rarified ritual, replete with the fun of discussion and replay.
The current Hot Club of New York is a music appreciation group that preserves and presents classic jazz on 78rpm records. With free weekly meetings on Zoom, the Hot Club’s mission, as stated by legendary jazz DJ Phil Schaap, is to “bring people in touch with classic jazz recordings.”
Jazz archivist and educator Matthew “Fat Cat” Rivera (WKCR-FM) hosts the weekly Hot Club meetings on Zoom and presents the Hot Club on the Air on WKCR, with classic jazz recordings from the 1920s-50s from original 78rpm records. Fat Cat brings his passion for collecting and research to each meeting, offering a chance to hear scarce records in their historic and aesthetic contexts, and to enjoy jazz records, classic and obscure alike, in a relaxed and welcoming environment.
With top-notch equipment and thousands of precious 78s, The Hot Club of New York is a home for the original performances of jazz, by the original pioneers, and on the original format. Fall in with the pack and dig the shellac!
Music you might hear at a Hot Club meeting:
King Oliver’s Creole Jazz Band — “Jazzin’ Babies’ Blues” (1923)
Miles Davis and his Orchestra — “Budo” (1949)
Louis Armstrong and his Hot Five — “Sugar Foot Strut” (1928)
Billie Holiday and her Orchestra — “No Regrets” (1936)
Charlie Parker All Stars — “Cheers” (1947)
Chick Webb and his Orchestra — “When Dreams Come True” (1934)
Bix Beiderbecke and his Gang — “At the Jazz Band Ball” (1927)
Duke Ellington and his Famous Orchestra — “Take the ‘A’ Train” (1941)
Count Basie and his Orchestra — “Jumpin’ at the Woodside” (1938)
Coleman Hawkins and his Orchestra — “Body and Soul” (1939)
Dizzy Gillespie — “Groovin’ High” (1945)
Jelly Roll Morton’s Red Hot Peppers — “Doctor Jazz” (1926)
Duke Ellington and his Cotton Club Orchestra — “Mood Indigo” (1930)
Bennie Moten and his Kansas City Orchestra — “Prince of Wales” (1932)
Benny Goodman and his Sextet — “Air Mail Special” (1941)
Chu Berry and his ‘Little Jazz’ Ensemble — “Stardust” (1938)