AndreyHenkin Posted 1 hour ago Report Posted 1 hour ago Does anyone any idea when this was first used in print to describe that circle of players and small DIY venues? Now it is ubiquitous but some journalist must have used it first. References to downtown jazz can be found in DownBeat as early as 1962 but that is strictly geographical discussing clubs rather than an aesthetic description. Quote
clifford_thornton Posted 55 minutes ago Report Posted 55 minutes ago This might be a question for Will Hermes... https://us.macmillan.com/books/9780374533540/lovegoestobuildingsonfire/ Quote
T.D. Posted 33 minutes ago Report Posted 33 minutes ago (edited) Somewhat off-topic, but "Downtown music" is a thing in classical/"new" music as well. Kyle Gann dates the scene (but not usage) to 1961 (Yoko Ono's loft 🙂), see https://www.kylegann.com/downtown.html I'm going to look into when that usage first appeared in print. Edited 26 minutes ago by T.D. Quote
clifford_thornton Posted 19 minutes ago Report Posted 19 minutes ago yes, Robert Wilson was called "Downtown Bob" (because of another Robert Wilson living, you guessed it, uptown), but I do not know if the term "Downtown" was ascribed to his art/theater scene in the late '60s or if the term as an aesthetic qualifier emerged later. https://whitney.org/exhibitions/rituals-of-rented-island Quote
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