[78-L] Jazz gift shop in Lincoln Center closes

David Weiner djwein at earthlink.net
Fri Jan 9 08:49:04 PST 2009


The closing of a total rip-off joint.....

Dave W.

-----------------

>From the NY Times

Cary Ginell


JANUARY 7, 2009, 11:05 AM

The Doors on a Jazz Gift Shop Swing Closed

By COREY KILGANNON

Phil Schaap, the D.J. and historian, teaches jazz survey classes at the Jazz
at Lincoln Center's adult education program known as Swing University.

Just over two years ago, he rented from the center a small space in the
lobby's fifth floor near the entrance to the center's performance spots, and
he hired some of his more knowledgeable students to help run the shop and,
less formally, dispense information and recommendations and directions to
the center's guests.

"We basically became the information center here," Mr. Schaap said at the
shop on Tuesday night - which, as it turns out, was its last night of
business.

The gift shop closed at midnight. Jazz at Lincoln Center officials would not
renew Mr. Schaap's lease, he said.

"If they loved it, I would have done it forever, but they didn't, and that's
O.K.," he added.

The shop was open daily through the end of the last set at Dizzy's Club
Coca-Cola, in the center's Frederick P. Rose Hall, in the Time Warner Center
at Columbus Circle.

For decades, Mr. Schaap has been the host of "Bird Flight," a morning show
of Charlie Parker's music on WKCR-FM (89.9), the radio station of Columbia
University. In the past few days, he had repeatedly announced on the show
that the shop was closing. He said there would be=2
0discounts on merchandise, and that he would be hanging around on Tuesday
until the doors closed, to talk jazz with any and all comers.

And on Tuesday, many people did show up for both offerings, including Walter
Blanding, a tenor saxophone player with the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra
who said, "I heard it was closing and I just had to stop by."

"What happened?" he said to Mr. Schaap, who taught him jazz history at the
New School, years ago. "I'm sorry to hear about this."

Mr. Schaap had been hearing this kind of thing all day, as had Rose
Rutledge, 25, the store's manager.

At one point, a tall woman approached Ms. Rutledge and said in a thick Swiss
accent something that sounded like, "Ees that Feel Shop?"

"Yes, that's Phil," Ms. Rutledge said. The woman, Annemarie Wiesner, a
violinist and an avid WKCR listener, asked Mr. Schaap: "Why are you closing?
It's so sad."

"Jazz at Lincoln Center wants to do something else, I guess," Mr. Schaap
replied.

Gail Beltrone, Jazz at Lincoln Center's vice-president of Frederick P. Rose
Hall, said that officials there were eager to see Mr. Schaap spend more time
as a teacher and curator at the center, and that the shop's closing was part
of a large-scale redesign of the open space on the fifth floor. The center
is planning to put up exhibits, create wi-fi networks for guests, and sell
jazz merchandise itself at other spo
ts on the floor.

At least business was booming on this last day. Some of the more popular
selling items included "The Story of Jazz," by Marshall W. Stearns, and
"Congo Square," a CD by Wynton Marsalis and the Jazz at Lincoln Center
orchestra. Autographed by Mr. Marsalis, it was selling for $53.

Now Ms. Rutledge was telling Mr. Schaap that some woman on the phone wanted
to buy 30 copies of Mr. Schaap's new book, "Charlie Parker and Jazz Club
Memorabilia," written with Norman R. Saks. The book, if autographed by both
Mr. Saks and Mr. Schaap, was selling for $75, "and you can't get it anywhere
else," noted Mr. Schaap, who then took the phone from Ms. Rutledge and told
her, "Go get your name in The New York Times."

Some of the most costly items were prints of jazz artists autographed by
legends, collected by Mr. Schaap over the years. One of them, priced to sell
at $4,000, was signed by Milt Hinton, Chico Hamilton, Wynton Marsalis,
Lionel Hampton, Roy Haynes and others. Then there were the mounted and
framed 78-r.p.m. records - "Santa Claus Blues," by Louis Armstrong, "Night
and Day," by Erroll Garner, and others - from Mr. Schaap's collection,
autographed by Mr. Marsalis and selling variously for several hundred
dollars apiece.

Hashem Sharif, of Tinton Falls, N.J., walked into the shop and also asked
for Mr. Schaap.

"I listen to his program religiously every day,"
 Mr. Sharif said. "This man is a national treasure. I heard it was the last
day for the shop and I had to come."

Mr. Sharif bought Mr. Schaap's book and asked him to sign it, which Mr.
Schaap did, with the inscription "Bird Lives." Mr. Sharif then sought Mr.
Schaap's assessment of the CDs he had selected. Mr. Schaap approved of his
choices, especially of a Count Basie CD.

"This was his last album while he was alive - it's very important," Mr.
Schaap said.

Mr. Schaap said the shop was a place where his jazz students gathered, and
had a knowledgeable staff, including a student of his, "who knows more about
the Fletcher Henderson Orchestra than anyone in the world under age 40."

He spoke highly of Ms. Rutledge, who put much of her jazz study on hold as
she ran the shop. She is a saxophonist with a master's degree in jazz
studies and who now studies independently with Mr. Schaap and aspires to be
a working musician. Now that the store was closing, she could at least put
more time into that, she said.

Mr. Sharif remarked that it was a challenging career choice, but Ms.
Rutledge said she was ready to pay her dues. After all, she noted, even
Charlie Parker got kicked off the bandstand in his early years.

"I guess I'll go get kicked off some bandstands," she said. 
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