Jimmy Ryan's
Jimmy Ryan's was a jazz club in New [York City], USA, located at 53 West 52nd Street, Manhattan, from 1934 to 1962 and 154 West 54th Street from 1962 to 1983. It was a venue for performances of Dixieland jazz.
History
The location at 52nd Street, Manhattan, New York City, was one of a row of brownstones with clubs operating in basements. As the last surviving jazz club on 52nd Street, its brownstone — along with all the other brownstones on the north side of the street — were demolished in 1962 to make way for construction of the new CBS Building. CBS had given Jimmy Ryan $9,000 to relocate.The club was owned by partners Matthew C. Walsh and Jimmy Ryan. Walsh, Ryan's brother-in-law, continued ownership following Ryan's death in July 1963 at the French Hospital. Gilbert J. Pincus — who served as doorman from 1942 to 1962 at the original location and from about 1963 until his death in 1980 — became known as the "Mayor of 52nd Street".
Jazz style
During the 1940s, three New York nightclubs stood out as centers for traditional style jazz: Jimmy Ryan's, Nick's in Greenwich Village, and Eddie Condon's just a few blocks away.Performing artists
Resident musicians from the 1940s- Mezz Mezzrow
- James P. Johnson
- Art Hodes
- J. C. Higginbotham
- Henry "Red" Allen
- Sidney De Paris
- Sidney Bechet
- Max Kaminsky
- Wilbur De Paris
- Zutty Singleton
- Roy Eldridge
- Sidney Bechet
- Pops Foster
- Hot Lips Page
- Pee Wee Russell
- Eddie Condon
- Mezz Mezzrow
- Kaiser Marshall
- Hank Duncan
- Sandy Williams
- Brad Gowans
- Ben Webster
- Chu Berry
- Coleman Hawkins
- Wildcats
Jazz tunes relating to the club
- Tony Parenti and his Dean's of Dixieland, "A Night at Jimmy Ryan's", Jazzology
- "Down in Jungletown"
- "Blues for Jimmy Ryan"Live at Jimmy's, a complete album was recorded live there in 1973 by Maynard Ferguson.