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This Is the Oldest Black-Owned Music Venue in the US

Buffalo's Colored Musicians Club is also the only continuously running, all-Black-owned music venue in the United States. Its history is still in the making.

Photo by Get Fokus’d Productions (2022).

Original text published by The Colored Musicians Club

Designated as a historical landmark and a historical preservation site, the history of The Colored Musicians Club is one of triumph over adversity, pride in African-American heritage, excellence in performance, and inclusiveness.

Musicians’ Local 533 was formed in 1917 during a time when African Americans were not permitted to join the White union. The following year, members formed a social club, which was chartered in 1935.

Any Black musicians who wanted to perform in the area had to pay a fee to the union, whose offices were located on the first floor of the club. Local 533 was the most fiscally responsible, socially progressive Black union in the country. Union President Raymond Jackson’s stellar managerial skills took him across America as a consultant to other Black Musicians’ Unions.

The club was incorporated in 1935, utilizing the second floor for performances, practice, and rehearsals. World-renowned musicians like Billie Holiday, Dizzy Gillespie, and Count Basie mingled with the audience.

Here, color was not the issue… jazz was.

Image courtesy of The Colored Musicians Club & Jazz Museum.

In 1969, after the passage of the Civil Rights Act, Local 533 was ordered to merge with the White union. But the newly integrated union favored its White members. Fortunately, the Colored Musicians Club was a separate entity from Local 533, so it offered Black artists performance opportunities. It became a place for musicians of all colors to gather after their gigs to jam.

Here hope triumphed over hate. Inclusivity and diversity reigned. The CMC brought people of all races together and inspired a new generation of musicians.

The club’s museum, designed by Hadley Exhibits in 2018, provides an interactive experience for visitors of all ages. A multimedia archive tells the story of jazz legends who performed there. Teenagers mix their own music. With the press of a button, young aspiring artists make a musical instrument play.

If its walls could talk, the Colored Musicians Club would speak of the power of jazz to bring all races together, the determination to overcome adversity, and the invaluable contributions of African Americans to our culture — especially in Buffalo, New York.

The Colored Musicians Club and Jazz Museum is dedicated to promoting research and preserving the history of African-American music, not only in Buffalo but globally. We aspire to enlighten, encourage, and educate our youth of their musical heritage.

Visit The Colored Musicians Club and Jazz Museum to learn more and view the club's upcoming event schedule.

The Colored Musicians Club & Jazz Museum