Antwerp Jazz Club
The Antwerp Jazz Club is an association in Antwerp, Belgium, founded in 1938 by Hans Philippi, which delivers weekly lectures about and presentations of jazz music, at no cost, open to the public at large. Its sessions are held in Dutch. Other than these sessions, the club organizes concerts, including helping to organize blues concerts; and has aided in the screenings of jazz documentaries.
Its Tuesday-sessions are held mostly by a member, and if not by another amateur of jazz, and are often illustrated by DVD-recordings. They are held every Tuesday night from 20PM until 22PM, but not during the Christmas period, nor the month of July. On request, the association also organises events about jazz for interested associations.
The jazz club is a member of:
- "De Stedelijke Culturele Raad van Antwerpen" ;
- Hot Club de France; and
- Centre for Black Music Research, Chicago, United States.
AJC is a subscriber to a number of jazz magazines, from the United States and from several European countries, which can be consulted in its clubhouse.
History
In 1938, the club started as gatherings to listen to commented jazz music, which remains the main activity of the club today.Since 1950, the club also started organizing concerts. Among the famous jazz musicians who have performed in Antwerp in the 1950s and 1960s, due to the AJC, are: Willie "The Lion" Smith, Big Bill Broonzy, Earl Hines, Memphis Slim, Buck Clayton, Bill Coleman, Buddy Tate, Ben Webster, Illinois Jacquet, Ray Bryant and Guy Lafitte.
On 28 April 1963 the AJC celebrated its silver jubilee.
The "Archive of Fons Van Cleempoel" entails some documents from the AJC.
On the club's seventy-year jubilee, the club honoured its own history by means of showing its own concert recordings, lengthy documentation and imagery during its Tuesday-sessions.
On 18 August 2016, the Antwerp cinema "Cinema Zuid", in collaboration with the AJC, organized a screening of two documentaries about the Belgian jazz musician and conductor Stan Brenders and about the jazz guitarist Django Reinhardt respectively.
Location
Since 8 November 1994, AJC holds its sessions in a bar called "Den Bengel" in Antwerp.More precisely, the clubhouse of AJC is housed in the same building as that bar, yet on the second floor. The building is actually an old guild house called "Ambachtshuis de Mouwe", which is registered and protected as a monument since 2 September 1976 into the Flemish inventory of immovable property, part of the heritage registers in Belgium.
The building's ground floor is dated 1579, its gable is dated 1628. The building was originally the "house" of the craft of cooperage. The architectural style of the building is renaissance architecture, it was designed by Léonard Blomme, and restored in 1907. The top of the building is crowned with a triangular pediment which holds a gilded statue of Saint Matthias, the patron saint of the coopers.
The building is part of the square Grote Markt. When facing its façade, one finds the building at its left and the building at its right, which are also protected monuments.
Notable persons
One of its board members is Piet Van De Craen, a full-time language professor of Dutch Linguistics and of General Linguistics at the Vrije Universiteit Brussel, who has been called a major force behind the jazz club. For the occasion of the seventy-year jubilee of the AJC in 2008, Piet Van De Craen published a monograph about Duke Ellington which features a concise biography and discography, looks at Ellington as a pianist/composer and at Ellington's co-operation with Billy Strayhorn and "The Ellingtonians" before and after 1943. In the same year, Piet Van De Craen also criticized the lack of references to jazz history in the United States:Presidents
Hans Philippi
Hans Philippi founded both the AJC, as well as the Hot Club Basel, a jazz club in Basel, Switzerland. He was an early advocate of the recognition of jazz as an art. He had his own radio series, held jazz music presentations by means of playing sound records throughout Switzerland and was acquainted with jazz musicians such as Louis Armstrong and jazz experts such as Hugues Panassié and Charles Delaunay.The Swiss jazz musician Mario Schneeberger compiled a list of notable documents regarding Hans Philippi, from the memorial albums of Philippi, after an acquaintance of Schneeberger had told him that they were about to be put up as garbage disposal following a house clearance in February 2004.
In this archive by Mario Schneeberger, it is noted that Hans Philippi was president of the AJC in 1938, as from a booklet of that year produced by the AJC called "Jazz-Leven".
Louis Vaes and François Vaes
The activities of the club were coordinated by Louis Vaes from 1946 until 1998.Later, his brother François Vaes, nicknamed "Sus", became president of the club, until he died after a "short disease" on 9 August 2012. François Vaes advocated for youths to appreciate the roots of jazz, as opposed to being seemingly merely interested in new or trendy jazz music.