Slugs' Saloon / Slugs' In The Far East

Slugs' Saloon / Slugs' In The Far East Slugs' Saloon (officially: Slugs' In The Far East) was a culturally important jazz club in Manhattan's Lower East Side, operating from 1964 to 1972.

Slugs’ Saloon was a jazz club at 242 East 3rd Street, between Avenue B and C in Manhattan's Lower East Side, operating from the mid-1960s to 1972. The location, in what was then a run-down part of New York City, first hosted a Ukrainian restaurant and bar, and later a bar that served as a meeting point for drug dealers. In 1964, Jerry Schultz opened it as a club and initially called it "Slugs’ Sal

oon", the "slugs" being a reference to the "three-centered beings" and "terrestrial three-brained beings" mentioned in the book Beelzebub's Tales to His Grandson by George Gurdjieff. Due to New York City regulations, the word "saloon" had to be dropped from the name. The venue was called "Slugs' in the Far East", due to its easterly location on the Lower East Side. The interior of the club was longer than it was wide and the bandstand all the way in the back. It could fit 75 people but often held twice that. The bar was on the left side as one entered the venue. The wooden sign that hung outside the venue was carved by James Jackson. During the mid-1960s it slowly started attracting regular jazz performances, developing a reputation as a musician's bar. In this period it became closely associated with free-jazz musician Sun Ra: from March 1966 through late 1967, Sun Ra and his Arkestra (billed as "Sun Ra and His Astro-Infinity Music") played regular gigs every Monday, and continued to play the venue irregularly thereafter. By the late 1960s the club had grown a vibrant scene in its out-of-the-way location, with performances from prominent jazz musicians including Sonny Rollins, Albert Ayler and Ornette Coleman, among many others. Some of these performances were recorded, often surreptitiously, and appear on officially released or on bootleg albums. Audiences included a number of well-known artists, ranging from Larry Rivers to Bob Thompson and Salvador Dalí. The venue saw the death of Lee Morgan on February 19, 1972, when he was shot at the bar by his common-law wife Helen More. The general demise of the neighborhood and his hard lifestyle as a club owner led Jerry Schulz to leave, and the club shut down in late 1972.

Check out this report about the Lee Morgan / Slugs event in February!
04/12/2022

Check out this report about the Lee Morgan / Slugs event in February!

“It’s All Music”-Lee Morgan Tribute Slide 1Slide 1 (current slide) Slide 2Slide 2 (current slide) Slide 3Slide 3 (current slide) Slide 4Slide 4 (current slide) Slide 5Slide 5 (current slide) Slide 6Slide 6 (current slide) Celebrating Lee Morgan: A Miracle 50 Years In the MakingBy Jean-Victor N...

🎺 EXCITING NEWS! 💥Acclaimed NYC-based theater producer Allan Buchman and Blueprint For Accountability are bringing back ...
02/18/2022

🎺 EXCITING NEWS! 💥

Acclaimed NYC-based theater producer Allan Buchman and Blueprint For Accountability are bringing back to life the old Slugs Saloon for an event on Saturday, February 19, 2022, close to the original location! There are also plans underway to open a club in a permanent location later this year!

Tomorrow night is a special event celebrating Lee Morgan which can be attended in person at 9 Avenue B in NYC or online via the link below.

Please, show your support for the rebirth of this famous jazz venue and for Lee Morgan by heading down to the club or streaming the show live in your own home, anywhere.

"IT'S ALL MUSIC!" ❤️

Link to Live Stream: https://fb.me/e/19kg6Ah6R

If you're in New York this coming May, check out this show Celebrating Ornette Coleman, featuring Wynton Marsalis!
03/21/2017

If you're in New York this coming May, check out this show Celebrating Ornette Coleman, featuring Wynton Marsalis!

The Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra with Wynton Marsalis celebrates one of jazz's great original geniuses: composer, Pulitzer

RIP Ornette Coleman. Thank you for the years of ground-breaking, fantastic music. We were always happy to hear you play ...
06/12/2015

RIP Ornette Coleman. Thank you for the years of ground-breaking, fantastic music. We were always happy to hear you play at Slugs'!

Just as we heard at Slugs' in this same time period, this is a live recording of Ornette in Belgium in 1969. Long live Ornette's music!

Blizen Festival, Belgium. 08/24/69 Ornette Coleman (alto saxophone, violin) Dewey Redman (tenor saxophone, Arabic oboe) Charlie Haden (bass) Ed Blackwell (dr...

Put this in your ears: Lee Morgan's 1963 album "The Sidewinder"
06/12/2015

Put this in your ears:
Lee Morgan's 1963 album "The Sidewinder"

El 21 de diciembre de 1963 Lee Morgan tuvo la 'mala suerte' de grabar "The Sidewinder". La canción se convirtió en un fenómeno, un superventas que casi destr...

Dig this....
06/12/2015

Dig this....

Artist: Charles Tolliver Title: Drought Album: Live at Slugs' Saloon Label: Strata-East Recorded: May 1, 1970, New York City Musicians: Charles Tolliver: Tru...

Founder Jerry Schultz was interviewed on New Zealand radio in 2014. It's a very interesting and entertaining story.
06/10/2015

Founder Jerry Schultz was interviewed on New Zealand radio in 2014. It's a very interesting and entertaining story.

Jerry Schultz and Robert Schoenholt opened Slug's Saloon in New York's Lower East Side in 1964, providing a raw alternative to Manhattan's glitzy jazz clubs and attracting a who's who of 60s jazz. Jerry Schultz ran Slug's for eight years before heading to India, then to Golden Bay, where he's been l…

Cool, man. Check out these posts on tumblr.
06/10/2015

Cool, man. Check out these posts on tumblr.

Post anything (from anywhere!), customize everything, and find and follow what you love. Create your own Tumblr blog today.

Lee Morgan and Hank Mobley, talking at a table in Slugs'.
06/10/2015

Lee Morgan and Hank Mobley, talking at a table in Slugs'.

06/09/2015
Great article!
06/08/2015

Great article!

Slugs’ Saloon opened its doors in 1964, a neighborhood bar owned by Robert Schoenholt, who died in 2012, and Jerry Schultz. By early 1965, many musicians who lived in the neighborhood convinced the owners to feature live jazz. The club rivaled the Five Spot Café as one ...

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242 E 3rd Street
Manhattan, NY
10009

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