Aug 26, 2025 1:53 PM
Blindfold Test: Buster Williams
Buster Williams, who at the age of 83 has been on the scene for 65 years, had never done a Blindfold Test. The first…
Spike Wilner, proprietor of the New York venue Smalls, recently began hosting shows at his club for the first time since the pandemic hit.
(Photo: Courtesy of Smalls)Compared to the other casualties of the worldwide coronavirus pandemic, it barely registers in media coverage and the public consciousness.
Yet in mid-March, the sudden shuttering of venues for live music—grand concert halls and small clubs, alike—constituted a devastating blow to jazz, strangling the livelihood of musicians and, in many cases, threatening their ability to survive.
If the indefinite closures have left musicians staggering, the cancellation of most spring and summer festivals was the coup de grâce, though signs of life have shown through as Jazzfest Passau forges ahead.
Venue owners in the United States, like all small businesses, are fighting to survive and trying to pay monthly bills in the face of a complete loss of revenue. Temporary moratoriums on evictions in some U.S. states, including California and New York, have helped buy time—without relieving owners of their rent obligations over the long term.
Catalina Popescu, owner of Los Angeles’ Catalina Jazz Club, has been operating the venue since 1986, but shut down March 15 and laid off the entirety of her 25-person staff.
“It’s been very painful,” Popescu said in April. “We’re OK for the time being. Nobody can force you to pay rent. [The landlords] send me an email every so often, but they can’t do anything about it. ... I fought for this business for 34 years, to stay open, to make it successful, to be a great place for people to listen to music and for musicians to perform. I hope we’ll be able to reopen.”
In April, more than 800 stateside independent concert presenters banded together to form the National Independent Venue Association, aiming to lobby Congress for financial assistance. By mid-May, the association had more than 1,600 members in all 50 states, according to its website.
“Independent venues were among the first to close as COVID-19 spread across the country, and unfortunately, are also likely to be among the last to reopen,” the group wrote in a press release.
Clubs’ financial pressures aren’t any better in London, either.
“We have nearly 100 [people] on the payroll. All but six are furloughed. We’re hoping the government’s scheme will keep everybody happy,” said Simon Cooke, general manager of Ronnie Scott’s, the landmark London jazz club, while discussing the government’s furlough program, which provides businesses 80 percent of their normal payroll costs, up to £2,500 per employee. The program, which began in April, was backdated to March 1, and has been extended, with changes, through October..
“We’re very established, almost a national institution, been around 60 years,” Cooke continued. “We have about 3,500 paid members, who are very supportive; most renew annually. I think we’ll be all right. If it’s a very long [shutdown], it may be a slow restart.”
In hard-hit New York, Spike Wilner, jazz pianist and proprietor of both Smalls and Mezzrow, was far less sanguine about the future. “Right now, I’m waiting to see if Smalls will exist in another month or so,” he said in March.
At the time, both clubs—which are located on the same block in pricey Greenwich Village—had rent payments of $20,000 apiece coming due.
“I think I’ll be able to get through April, but after that, I don’t know,” he said.
“What I got from Percy was the dignity of playing the bass,” Buster Williams said of Percy Heath.
Aug 26, 2025 1:53 PM
Buster Williams, who at the age of 83 has been on the scene for 65 years, had never done a Blindfold Test. The first…
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