Klooks Kleek
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Klooks_Kleek an entity of type: Thing
Klooks Kleek war in den 1960er-Jahren ein Veranstaltungsraum im Railway Hotel, West Hampstead, North West London, der auch heute noch besteht. Der Club wurde nach einem Album von Kenny Clarke aus dem Jahre 1956 (Klook’s Clique, Savoy Records 12006) benannt.
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Klooks Kleek was a jazz and rhythm 'n’ blues club on the first floor of the Railway Hotel, West Hampstead, north-west London. Klooks Kleek was a jazz and rhythm 'n’ blues club on the first floor of the Railway Hotel, West Hampstead, north-west London. Named after "Klook's Clique", a 1956 album by jazz drummer Kenny Clarke (Savoy Records 12006), the club opened on 11 January 1961 with special guest Don Rendell (tenor sax) and closed nine years later on 28 January 1970 after a session by drummer Keef Hartley’s group.
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Klooks Kleek
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Klooks Kleek
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Klooks Kleek war in den 1960er-Jahren ein Veranstaltungsraum im Railway Hotel, West Hampstead, North West London, der auch heute noch besteht. Der Club wurde nach einem Album von Kenny Clarke aus dem Jahre 1956 (Klook’s Clique, Savoy Records 12006) benannt.
rdf:langString
Klooks Kleek was a jazz and rhythm 'n’ blues club on the first floor of the Railway Hotel, West Hampstead, north-west London. Klooks Kleek was a jazz and rhythm 'n’ blues club on the first floor of the Railway Hotel, West Hampstead, north-west London. Named after "Klook's Clique", a 1956 album by jazz drummer Kenny Clarke (Savoy Records 12006), the club opened on 11 January 1961 with special guest Don Rendell (tenor sax) and closed nine years later on 28 January 1970 after a session by drummer Keef Hartley’s group. There were over 1200 sessions at Klook’s Kleek, around 300 of them were featuring jazz, and the others, rhythm ‘n’ blues. Zoot Money, Ten Years After, John Mayall and Graham Bond recorded live albums at Klooks Kleek. The British blues and rhythm and blues boom of the early 1960s brought to the club many living legends.
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