1TODDâS TUNE
I just wanted to present the best
music that we could with the
warmest feeling that we could.
Todd Barkan
Todd Barkan
Keystone Korner was, as much as anything else, the only real psychedelic jazz club that lasted. There were a couple of little experiments in that area, and isolated experiments in the United States, but Keystone was a bona fide psychedelic jazz club that emerged out of the post-psychedelic era in San Francisco â right out of flower children and Haight-Ashbury.
I was born in Lincoln, Nebraska, in 1946 and was deeply immersed in jazz from my earliest remembered times. My family moved to Columbus, Ohio, where my grandparents were, and we had lots of jazz records in the house. I listened to jazz and became a jazz fanatic by the time I was eight or nine years old. I had literally thousands of records by the time I was in college. I used to work as a construction worker and would take every penny I had and buy jazz records. And I used to hear as much jazz as I could. I first started playing the piano when I was six years old. And it was in Columbus that I met Rahsaan Roland Kirk, who became a mentor to me later on.
Ohio used to have a lot more live jazz than it has now. Miles Davis, Cannonball Adderley, Jimmy Smith â all these groups played in Ohio. It was part of the circuit: Youngstown, Columbus, Cleveland, Cincinnati, Toledo, Indianapolis, Chicago, Buffalo, Rochester. They used to play for a week or two in Columbus. Itâs not part of a circuit any more, so when people come through, they play for one day. Cannonball Adderley would play for a week at the Club 502. Youâd have a triple bill of the John Coltrane Quartet, B. B. King, and Edwin Double-O Soul Starr. Youâd have an R&B and a blues and a jazz artist all on the same bill, playing three sets a night each, from eight at night until four in the morning. It was a different era.
I went to Oberlin College, and then I went west. I was heavily into Paladin, the television show with Richard Boone, so I kind of went west looking for Paladin and dreams of psychedelia. And I wound up in San Francisco, 1967, during the summer of love, with a flower in my hair and a Fender Rhodes piano, playing in an Afro-Cuban band called Kwane and the Kwandidos. It was a great band. An electric piano, Fender Rhodes, three horns. John Handy played in that band. A lot of great players played in that band. We used to play in the park â with dancers with no clothes on. It was wonderful. It was San Francisco. Hippies. The music is talked about sometimes in an over-isolatedly focused fashion. Itâs not often talked about as something produced by an entire environment or a set of cultural developments that happened to be synchronistically creating this cultural phenomenon.
I lived near Haight-Ashbury, up on Buena Vista East, and went to Keystone Korner, then a blues bar, to get a gig. It was next to the Keystone cops. [Keystone Korner was across an alley from the North Beach Police Station.] The owner of that blues bar, Freddie Herrera, who later opened Keystone Berkeley and Keystone Palo Alto, told me, âI hate jazz. It doesnât sell. I donât like jazz. But maybe you can buy the club and hire your own band and then you can, you know, have a jazz club.â He was going to close it down; he was just going to sell it to the highest bidder. But I came along and he said, âWell, you can continue the club, but itâs too small for what I want to do, and I need capital. I got this other room opening any day now, and I need to get the other place open and this place closed and letâs get going here.â So I came by a couple of days later with all the money I had in the world, which was about $8,000, and I put $5,000 down, and I financed the rest of the club. He had the banker there and I signed a note for another $7,500, and I paid $400 a month for a couple of years. Thatâs how Keystone Korner started.
Freddie Herrera gave me a couple of nights for free before I officially opened as a jazz club. I had Jerry Garcia and Merl Saunders there and they were playing very psychedelic music. I didnât have to do anything but keep their names up on the marquee. I didnât even have to pay the band; I just had to get the place open. It was a transitional gig to help me get off the ground. We were repainting, getting the joint fixed up.
So they came in, and Jerry Garcia started to warm up in my office. He had one guy with him, an employee, who did nothing but roll joints. He was rolling joints, Jerry was playing, loud â ten on his amp â and I said, âNo, this is not what I want to do.â That really reinforced my wanting to make it a jazz club only. So thatâs what I did. We opened a jazz club, and eleven years later we closed down. But it was definitely a very wonderful ride. [Long pause] A rollercoaster ride.
I opened with the Michael White Quartet on June 7, 1972: Michael White, Kenneth Nash, Ed Kelley, and Ray Drummond. Two nights. Then Bobby Hutchersonâs band came in and played for a couple of nights, and then McCoy Tyner played for a whole week. Thatâs how we started.
Keystone Korner was definitely a bright moment in song. It was very much a cooperative effort, a very rare oasis where everybody seemed to be focused, with the same feelings about the music, and thatâs part of what made it a special experience. It was not only the care that I took of the musicians but the care they received from everybody working there.
There was Flicka [McGurrin, a waitress], who became quite a mover and shaker at Pier 23, but Keystone was her launching pad. Helen Highwater [Helen Wray, a waitress] â thatâs what I called her. You know, come hell or high water? That was my nickname for her. [Shouts] Helen Highwater! We loved her; we still do. Kristen [artist Kristen Wetterhahn] was working there as a waitress. Jack [San Francisco Poet Laureate Jack Hirschman] was handing out poems.
I had a series of managers. Tim Rosenkrans was there a long time. He was a bartender, an assistant manager, then manager; later on, he was one of the first managers of the Blue Note in New York. And then he died tragically at a relatively early age. Unknown reason. The main managers were Mark Dolezal, Tim Rosenkrans, and Nancy Swingle. Dolezal had long hair. He was a hippie-dippy. Great guy. The list of employees in [the notes for Dexter Gordonâs CD series] Nights at the Keystone is the most comprehensive list, but there is no real recorded history of the Keystone. I mean, there isnât any accurate book, you know?
Claudia Deal, she was there a long time. She was a door person and a receptionist. A ticket booth operator. That was a very important position. The ticket booth was right out in front âcause we sold tickets right on the street. Bob, he was there for quite a while.
Everybody that was working â whether it was the sound personnel (Milton Jeffries or Jim McKean or Mark Romero) or door personnel, the people working behind the bar, Mike in the kitchen, the managers and the assistant managers, and the waitresses and the waiters â everybody who was working there had the same kind of involvement with the music where they really, really got it and were able to really help support the music and to be responsive to the music.
For us at Keystone Korner, the greatest triumph in the world was paying the rent. And the phone bill. If we did that, we were supremely successful and happened to present the greatest music we could at the same time. But we never got any grants-in-aid or real solid support from anybody except a little bit of money from Bill Cosby and a few benefit concerts we did, especially in the early years.
In 1973 and 1975 we did some benefit concerts, which helped raise money for Keystone Korner. We had a benefit in 1973 with Rahsaan Roland Kirk, Freddie Hubbard, McCoy Tyner, Ron Carter, and Elvin Jones playing with the Black Classical Music Society, which is a concept I developed. We played at the Oakland Paramount Theater in February 1973 and we were able to raise enough money to buy a liquor license. And Rahsaan was a main motivator in actually having the idea to do that concert: âSo letâs get the guys together to do a concert, and weâll raise the money and weâll get a liquor license.â And then we had another concert, early in 1975, and we were able to raise enough at the same Paramount Theater in Oakland to build a kitchen. And the kitchen enabled us to admit minors and make it a family club for the next eight years. But those things would not have happened without the musicians who donated their services to play. They didnât get paid anything. They just got their hotel and airfare, per diem expenses, but they worked for free.
Iâve never even heard of anything like that in the history of jazz â a bunch of musicians getting together and buying a club a liquor license. And then Grover Washington and George Benson getting together and deciding to do a benefit for us to buy a kitchen so that we could stay open and help the music out. Grover Washington Jr. was the best man at my wedding.
Thatâs all part of the Keystone story. Itâs a place that struggled, but its struggle was also a part of why it was special. We didnât have any pretentiousness; there was no room for any hauteur or arrogance or remoteness or, you know, impersonality. We were so close to the street and so down with the people because we had to be. Thatâs where we were. We were right on the street. So we had to make it right there on the street, and we had a network of people.
Our primary form of advertising was a network of volunteers who passed out flyers. That was the main way that we promoted Keystone Korner: with sweat equity. Nobody ever did a press release but me in eleven years âcause I couldnât afford to hire a publicist. I would print them myself, then I would get some people to help me stuff envelopes and send them out. Here [in New York at the club Dizzyâs], we have a publicity department, a promotion department, and all that, but in that era we just did it all ourselves. You know, I enjoyed it âcause I could get creative with it â put little pictures and all.
I think I was extremely naĂŻve in how low I made the ticket prices, and how I almost gave the music away for many years. My brother made a crack that was published in Billboard that one of my great, brilliant business moves was to buy the music retail and sell it wholesale. He said that in the pages of Billboard magazine, which did not make me happy, but there was a kernel of truth to that. My bank account regrets it, but I donât necessarily regret it. Cannonball Adderley was playing there, and I was charging $3 during the week and $3.50 on the weekend. For Cannonball Adderley. In 1973. I could have charged a little more than that. But I really wanted to make it affordable and I was quite a bit of a hippie in that regard. I was a psychedelic flower child in many ways.
Countless records were made there: Rahsaan Roland Kirkâs Bright Moments; McCoy Tynerâs Atlantis; Tete Montoliu, Live at the Keystone Korner; Dexter Gordon, Nights at the Keystone, which was just reissued [as a three-CD set] on Mosaic; Bill Evans, sixteen CDs, eight of which are called Consecration and eight of which are called The Last Waltz; Art Blakey, In This Korner, Straight Ahead, and Keystone 3 â and two out of three of those records have early Wynton Marsalis on them. Red Garlandâs I Left My Heart is an important recording. There are numerous live recordings. All the Way Live, the only recording of Jimmy Smith and Eddie Harris together, was done there.
Some were made by us doing board tapes and then going to the record companies later on. Dexter Gordonâs were tapes that Dexter and I made ourselves, and then when the time was right I asked Dexter about it, he liked the idea, and I went to Bruce Lundval at Blue Note. We put them out at a time when Dexter wasnât really doing very much, so it was very helpful to everybody concerned. Those are classic recordings.
Freddie Hubbardâs were done by record companies, although one was a board tape that we were able to put out later. Freddie Hubbard was very well paid for that. We never made a dime on those. We never got paid for any of those recordings. In fact, I was so idealistic I never even charged the record companies. No, we didnât make money. We got no advances and no royalties for any of those recordings.
I was able to make a little bit of money from the Bill Evans recordings for the producer fees, although I didnât get any royalties. Iâve never gotten any royalties for any Keystone records, but Iâve gotten some producer fees for the work, a few thousand dollars for producing. All the hundreds of hours that you have to put into producing records. . . . And thereâll be more Keystone records as time goes on. There are thousands of tapes. But everybody has to get paid. It has to go through a very legitimate process for a record to come out [today]. Thereâve never been any bootleg records I know of.
We definitely felt a really strong mandate to present a wide spectrum of music, and education was part of what we did. That was definitely intentional, but it was also part of our hippie-esque, utopian vision. And I think it was a good part. We definitely felt that the music, the whole spectrum of jazz music, went all the way from Jelly Roll Morton to Cecil Taylor, with everything in between. That was part of black classical music. That was part of improvisational, creative music. And thatâs how I feel to this day.
I was in San Francisco from 1967 until 1983. I moved to New York in 1983 and Iâve lived in New York ever since. My desire to leave San Francisco was accelerated by the change I felt in San Francisco itself, which at a certain point became much more yuppified, buppified, guppified. In the Reagan era of the early â80s, I felt San Francisco had totally changed. It wasnât the hippie paradise that I had enjoyed at the end of the â60s; it was about as diametrically opposed from that as I could imagine. So I got discouraged and felt the need to change venues, change partners and dance. I felt the desire at that time to come back to New York and continue my work. In certain ways, I had to...