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Urban archeology tour seeks out undiscovered jazz landmark Print E-mail
Written by Ronaldo Oregano   
Saturday, 04 February 2006
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Sid leProtti So Diff'rent Jazz Orchestra

The Fillmore area of San Francisco has perhaps a deeper legacy with jazz music than commonly thought. Historian John William Templeton has researched the impact of three black-owned nightclubs in the Barbary Coast area dating from 1901 on the development of jazz music for his four-volume anthology Our Roots Run Deep: the Black Experience in California, Vols. 1-4 and for an exhibition in Los Angeles last year called JazzGenesis.

Under the sponsorship of the Jazz Heritage Center, slated to open in 2007 in the Fillmore Heritage Center at Fillmore and Eddy, Templeton has researched the genealogy of the members of the Sid leProtti So Diff'rent Jazz Orchestra.

In Los Angeles, he found the son and granddaughter of the saxophonist Benjamin Franklin 'Reb" Spikes, billed as the 'world's greatest saxophonist" in promotional literature for Purcell's So Diff'rent Nightclub. The building of Purcell's, rebuilt in 1906, still stands at 550 Pacific St. (between Montgomery and Kearny).

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Sid leProtti Band
Sid leProtti, the pianist and band leader, grew up in West Oakland in a family that had performed in California since the Gold Rush. However, at the height of the fame of his band in 1920, newly released Census records show that leProtti, who apparently was first to use jazz in the name of his band, actually lived in the Fillmore area.

The walking tour will survey many sites where jazz musicians played along Fillmore Street, with commentary by Fitzsimmons, son of jazz performers and organizer of a list of local jazz legends honored during the groundbreaking of the Fillmore Heritage Center.

Fitzsimmons is launching a National Photo Contest from the website www.jazzheritagecenter.com beginning Feb. 1 for submissions which will be displayed as icon display panels on the exterior of the building.  For additional information, call 415-255-7745.

Aan urban archeology walking tour led by celebrity tour guide Peter Fitzsimmons, director of the Jazz Heritage Center, and historian John William Templeton on Saturday, Feb. 4 at 11 a.m. beginning at Fillmore and Eddy Streets. The tour is one of four weekly Saturday tours produced by FillmoreLive!, the year-round production and performance project of San Francisco Juneteenth, during its Black History Month schedule which began Wednesday night with Mineola to Mayor, a lively one-hour discussion with former Mayor and Assembly Speaker Willie L. Brown Jr., who credited much of his extraordinary political success with the exposure and lessons he learned in the Fillmore district.

On Monday, Feb. 6, the Harriet Tubman Health Conductors will meet in the African-American Art and Culture Complex at 762 Fulton St. at 5:30 to begin a training class for lay educators on effective personal health practices.

For more details on FillmoreLive! Black History Month activities, call 415-265-9455 or email This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it
 
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