Hot Clubs, a History
Our story begins long before any of us were born, in the 17th arrondissement of Paris…
In 1931, five students at the Lycée Carnot began regularly meeting to listen to American jazz records. Surely they were not the first to listen to 78rpm discs in this way, but they may have been the first to name the endeavor: they formalized their listening session into the Hot Club de France, the leading organization for studying and promoting such phonograph records and the hot music they contained.
When most music was live and records no more than 4 minutes per side, hearing hot music was necessarily a social activity. The Hot Club model proliferated as the ideal listening environment – a way to gather and listen intentionally, to celebrate new releases and to dig the rare out-of-print discs you needed to know someone to hear. Discography developed to help these listeners find, explore, and appreciate this music as thoroughly as possible.
But by the mid-’50s, record industry developments had altered how people listened to music. As new genres dominated the market, the 33rpm Long Playing disc (LP) and thereby the album became the new standard. The 78rpm disc was rendered obsolete. With opportunities to hear old 78s even more scarce, their enthusiasts had to get creative. Teaching/writing jazz history, broadcasting over FM radio, rereleasing 78rpm records on LPs and later CDs… second generation shellac aficionados continued their forebears’ grassroots efforts while utilizing the modern media at their disposal to cultivate a modest niche for pre-Elvis American music among the listening public.
Following in the footsteps of this second generation while hearkening back to the first, a third generation of hot music enthusiasts is now charting a course for the Digital Age…
“A Neo Hot Club Movement has launched. Its founding principle: use exquisite audio to play classic Jazz on the original 78RPM records. The Neo Hot Club Movement is led by young students of classic Jazz. The Neo Hot Cub Movement is populated by young people.”
By re-introducing the social component of listening to records, gathering in-person and online to hear the original 78rpm discs, the Neo Hot Club Movement is fostering a global community of collectors, musicians, and listeners. As members of this Neo Hot Club Movement, we at Shellac! take up the old Hot Club charge to promote the most widespread and thorough awareness of and access to this music as possible. We’ve got the records and we’ve got the discography. We are now creating a proper home for 78-era music on the Internet so that you too can:
“Fall in with the pack and dig the shellac!”
The Team
-
Graham Jacobson
FOUNDER
-
Jeremy Corren
DIRECTOR OF DIGITAL OPERATIONS
-
Matthew Rivera
CURATOR
-
Colin Hancock
CURATOR
The Artists
-
Louis Armstrong
Cornet, Trumpet
-
Lovie Austin
Composer, Piano
-
Buster Bailey
Clarinet
-
Sidney Bechet
Clarinet, Saxophone
-
Bix Beiderbecke
Cornet
-
Eubie Blake
Composer, Piano
-
Steve Brown
Bass
-
Hoagy Carmichael
Composer, Piano, Vocals
-
Will Marion Cook
Composer, Lyricist
-
Johnny Dodds
Clarinet, Saxophone
-
Warren "Baby" Dodds
Drums
-
Johnny Dunn
Bandleader, Trumpet
-
Honoré Dutrey
Trombone
-
Duke Ellington
Bandleader, Composer, Piano
-
James Reese Europe
Bandleader, Composer
-
Jean Goldkette
Bandleader
-
Charlie Green
Trombone
-
Sonny Greer
Drums
-
W.C. Handy
Bandleader, Composer
-
Lil Hardin
Composer, Piano
-
Coleman Hawkins
Clarinet, Saxophone
-
Fletcher Henderson
Bandleader, Piano
-
Bill Johnson
Bandleader, Banjo, Bass
-
James P. Johnson
Composer, Piano
-
Scott Joplin
Composer
-
Freddie Keppard
Cornet
-
Tommy Ladnier
Cornet, Trumpet
-
Eddie Lang
Guitar
-
Sara Martin
Vocals
-
Loren McMurray
Saxophone
-
Bubber Miley
Cornet, Trumpet
-
Miff Mole
Trombone
-
Chauncey Morehouse
Drums
-
George Morrison
Bandleader, Violin
-
Jelly Roll Morton
Bandleader, Composer, Piano
-
Bennie Moten
Bandleader, Piano
-
Red Nichols
Cornet
-
Jimmie Noone
Clarinet, Saxophone
-
Joe "King" Oliver
Bandleader, Cornet
-
Kid Ory
Bandleader, Trombone
-
Armand J. Piron
Composer, Violin
-
Ollie Powers
Bandleader, Drums, Vocals
-
Ma Rainey
Vocals
-
Don Redman
Arranger, Clarinet, Saxophone
-
Luckey Roberts
Composer, Piano
-
Adrian Rollini
Goofus, Saxophone
-
Leon Roppolo
Clarinet, Saxophone
-
Noble Sissle
Bandleader, Lyricist, Vocals
-
Bessie Smith
Vocals
-
Chris Smith
Composer, Vaudevillian
-
Clara Smith
Vocals
-
Mamie Smith
Bandleader, Vocals
-
Johnny St. Cyr
Banjo, Guitar
-
Wilbur Sweatman
Bandleader, Clarinets
-
Joe Venuti
Violin
-
Will Vodery
Composer
-
Fats Waller
Composer, Piano
-
Ethel Waters
Vocals
-
Paul Whiteman
Bandleader
-
Clarence Williams
Bandleader, Composer, Piano