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A'La Juice - Live @ Charlie's Place 3 месяца назад


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A'La Juice - Live @ Charlie's Place

JP Taylor - keys, flute Daniel Simons - guitar Wade McMillan - drums Conner Mills - keys Justin Trout - EWI Christopher McGraw - fretless microbass produced by Conner Mills audio mixed by McKinley Devilbiss video by Reuben Long title animation by Clay Broussard live video switching by Jay Burgess special thanks to Greg James, Anthony Davis, and the City of Myrtle Beach A'La Juice performs at Charlie's Place 21 October 2023 as part of the 7th Annual Myrtle Beach Jazz Festival From SC Historical Marker 26-30 : Charlie and Sarah Fitzgerald opened Charlie's Place as a supper club in 1937. It was a stop on the "Chitlin' Circuit," nightclubs where black entertainers such as Billie Holiday, the Mills Brothers, Little Richard, Ruth Brown, Otis Redding, and the Drifters performed during the era of racial segregation. While the club is gone, the Fitzgerald Motel, built in 1948, remains. The motel served black entertainers and travelers who could not stay in whites-only hotels. Oral tradition holds that "the Shag," a form of southern swing dancing, originated here. Both white and black customers gathered here to listen to music and dance. In 1950 the Ku Klux Klan led a parade through "The Hill," the African American neighborhood where Charlie's Place was located. The Klan returned later and shots were fired into the club, injuring many. Charlie was severely beaten but survived. Some Klansmen were charged, but no one was prosecuted. From Wikipedia : Unlike many African-American establishments of the time, said Dino Thompson in his 2014 book Boogie Woogie Beats, Charlie's Place was not a "barrelhouse" but was "crafted out of heart-cypress, with "starch-shirt waiters, classy coiffed hostesses, pomaded dance couples and boasted ... swing and boogie royalty." Whites and blacks could listen to music together and dance with no problem, but opponents considered the practice "dangerous" and the Horry County sheriff warned that this should not be happening. On August 26, 1950, about 60 members of the Ku Klux Klan fired 500 rounds of ammunition into Charlie's Place. One Klan member, a local police officer, was killed, and the club's jukebox was shot. Fitzgerald threatened "bloodshed" and later, while holding a gun to protect his property, was dragged away and beaten and his ear was marked. Frank Beacham, who wrote a book about Charlie's Place, said the Klan acted "to kill the rise of Black music." 0:00 Friendly 3:57 Ghost Town 8:18 Dirty Socks Suite 20:40 Don’t Sign It 27:41 Elevator Island 32:58 A’La Juice

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