Piece image

Last Call for Alcohol

From: KCUR
Series: KC Currents
Length: 06:46

Jazz was born in Kansas City during the prohibition, but what happens when 1920s-era hangout stops serving liquor? Read the full description.

627building_small INTRO: In the 1920s and 30s, Kansas City was considered a wide open town -- wide open for gangsters, liquor and gambling -- but also great blues, ragtime and swing. The distinctive sound of Kansas City jazz developed at all-night jam sessions around town, and particularly at the black union hall now known as the Mutual Musicians Foundation. Through the decades, the Foundation has become a Mecca for musicians from around the world, but a recent crackdown by Kansas City liquor authorities has left jazz fans wondering if the scene can really live on into the 21st century. Sylvia Maria Gross visited the Foundation late on a recent Saturday night ? actually very early Sunday. UPDATE: The police shut down the Mutual Musician Foundation's liquor sales in September 2006. They're now serving until 3am, and hoping a new state law that's in the Missouri legislature will grant the Foundation, as a non-profit located in a National Historic Landmark, an exception to serve liquor until 6am. For more on the Mutual Musicians Foundation: http://www.umkc.edu/orgs/local627/foundation/ http://thefoundationjamson.org/

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Piece Description

INTRO: In the 1920s and 30s, Kansas City was considered a wide open town -- wide open for gangsters, liquor and gambling -- but also great blues, ragtime and swing. The distinctive sound of Kansas City jazz developed at all-night jam sessions around town, and particularly at the black union hall now known as the Mutual Musicians Foundation. Through the decades, the Foundation has become a Mecca for musicians from around the world, but a recent crackdown by Kansas City liquor authorities has left jazz fans wondering if the scene can really live on into the 21st century. Sylvia Maria Gross visited the Foundation late on a recent Saturday night ? actually very early Sunday. UPDATE: The police shut down the Mutual Musician Foundation's liquor sales in September 2006. They're now serving until 3am, and hoping a new state law that's in the Missouri legislature will grant the Foundation, as a non-profit located in a National Historic Landmark, an exception to serve liquor until 6am. For more on the Mutual Musicians Foundation: http://www.umkc.edu/orgs/local627/foundation/ http://thefoundationjamson.org/

Broadcast History

This story was originally produced for KCUR's KC Currents in December 2006, and then was re-edited for Studio 360 in March 2007.

Timing and Cues

Story ends at 5:30, music continues until 6:45.

Musical Works

Title Artist Album Label Year Length
Local 627 Stomp Pete Johnson Decca 1940 00:45
Last Call for Alcohol Julia Lee 1927 00:30

Additional Files