653 Chenery Street
in San Francisco's Glen Park neighborhood

1-415-586-3733
[email protected]

Open to walk-in trade and browsing
Tuesday to Sunday
noon to six

 

Live Streams every weekend!

Refresh your browser to catch a show in progress!
Visit our Facebook page or YouTube channel!
But nothing beats being in the room with the music & the musicians!

Wednesday, April 16th – 7:30pm
Songs for Salvation: “Jazz Plays Spirituals”
Neil Adler & Gospel Interfaith Vocals

In troubled times music is a salve for the soul. This ‘Jazz plays Spirituals’ concert features Neil Adler (piano/bass), Michael Turner (voice/piano), David Adler (bass) and John Anning (drums). Neil Adler is a local bandleader/pianist and chromatic harmonica player whose has ‘Emi’s Song’ album, featuring a variety of jazz genres, was released with great success last year. Neil’s other side is playing gospel piano in a Pentecostal church with multi-instrumentalist Michael Turner. This powerhouse aggregation will bring jazz spirituals to celebrate Emancipation Day, in a concert that promises to be inspirational and uplifting. $20 cover charge

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Kim Shuck’s VirtualPoets – 2nd & 4th Mondays

Monday, April 14th – 7pm
Poet Fatemeh Shams
Open mic follows

Fatemeh Shams is the author of When They Broke Down the Door (Mage 2016), which won Latifeh Yarshater’s Annual Book Award, and Hopscotch (Ugly Duckling Presse, 2024) which won the 2023 Poetry International Chapbook Award. She teaches Persian literature at the University of Pennsylvania. Kim Shuck hosts featured poets with an open mic on the 2nd Monday of each month. On the 4th Monday of the month, the reading is all open mic. Join Zoom Meeting https://us02web.zoom.us/j/84350265713?pwd=eE84V3BYdWxiSFBHNHhmdUt1WTUzdz09 Meeting ID: 843 5026 5713 Passcode: 244211

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April in Frisco! Grab a flight & join us!
Fight the power with music & culture!

Saturday (4/12) from 7:30-9:30pm, the Levit-Behrman Quintet, with Joel Behrman, trumpet; Jesse Levit, alto sax; Matt Clark, piano; Josh Thurston-Milgrom, bass; Jeff Marrs, drums. There’s a lot to be said about this quintet and its fine, well-traveled personnel. Suffice to say, they’re coming in tight and rehearsed. Read a whole lot more on the calendar linked from the Events button up above on this website! $25 cover charge, byob.___________ Sunday (4/13) from 7:00-9:00 pm, the Jim Nichols / Charlie Keagle Duo. This is going to be a lovely date, as guitarist Nichols and reed player Keagle engage as a duo with exquisite music guaranteed. $20 cover charge, byob. ___________ Already in town? Muni will get you here quick. Out in the Far East Bay or South Bay? There’s BART. Up in the North Country? We got bridges and surface streets! Languishing in Cap d’Antibe or Paris? Rome, Kolkata or Cuzco?…

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Another Friday at Bird & Beckett
two wonderful varieties of jazz
dig it!

Friday (4/11) from 6-8pm, Eric & the In Crowd, tonight with Eric Shifrin, piano/vocal; Heath Proskin, bass; and Jimmy Duchowny, drums, plus a surprise guest. Jimmy, who’s just flown in from Brazil, is an old friend from Eric’s teenage jazz beginnings. Back then, in Malibu, Eric was playing sax and heard that a younger kid who lived around the corner was playing the drums.  Jimmy also had a piano and his dad put it in a small nook at the back of the house where Eric and Jimmy began playing all the time.  Just the two of them Eric on piano and sax, Jimmy on drums. Once, when they heard that Ronnie Laws had moved in across the street, they set up in Jimmy’s front yard and tried to attract the famous jazz flutist’s attention playing Eric’s fiercely modern tune RED SHIFT. The rest is history! $20/byob._________ Friday (4/11) from…

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Thursday, April 11th – 7:30pm
Walker Talks: Jataka Tale of the Buddha

    Walker Brents tells Jataka tales of the Buddha in a live stream on our YouTube channel and Facebook page. No charge; stay home and take your own beverage to your couch. Turn on your internet and you’re here!

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Sunday, April 6th – 5-7pm
Ryan Ancheta Combo + Jam Session

The first Sunday of each month, from 5pm to 7pm, we host a student jazz combo for a set rolling into a jam session. Turn out today to hear trumpeter Ryan Ancheta, a recent RASOTA graduate now in his freshman year at UC Berkeley, who has pulled together a quintet drawn from the immensely talented students schooled at the San Francisco Conservatory of Music — saxophonist Nico Colucci, pianist Gene Wadsworth, bassist Alan Jones and drummer Miles Turk. The combo will host the jam session following their set, and students in jazz programs throughout the Bay Area are invited to step up to the bandstand. Your donations help us pay a small stipend to the combo! But there’s no cover charge, and no fee to play in the session. Here’s how it all turned out…

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Saturday, April 5th – 7:30-9:30pm
Singer Marina Crouse & Her Trio
jazz, blues and boleros

Marina Crouse is a powerful, soulful singer with a lovely and expressive range, in English and Spanish both, nourished by a California youth with Mexican roots. One of the supremely satisfying experiences you’ll have in the darkened bookshop of a Saturday night. Marina Crouse, vocals. Danny Caron, guitar. Ruth Davies, bass. Mark Lee, drums.  $20 cover charge; cash or venmo, please. byob. Teens and students, $10. Reservations, call 415-586-3733. Tonight’s performance by Marina Crouse and her trio is supported by Jazz in the Neighborhood’s Guaranteed Fair Wage Fund!  

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Friday, April 4th – 8:30-10pm
San Francisco Syncopators

A five-piece band rollicking deep in a swamp of hot jazz with ragtime roots and a swing fever, the Syncopators keep the dance halls hoppin’ and the club crowds on the edge of their seats, toes tappin’. Ryan Calloway on bass saxophone and Rob Reich on piano are the masterminds of the band, squeezing every ounce of virtuosity out of ragtime guitar genius Craig Ventresco and tenor saxophonist Kamrin Ortiz goosed to the heights by drummer Benny Amón. Talent and joy to spare.  $25 cover tonight; byob. Tonight’s date is subsidized by Jazz in the Neighborhood, a 501(c)3 that relies on your donations! Their support allows us to pay a fair guaranteed wage to these five musicians irrespective of audience revenues, for which we thank them very much. Visit jazzintheneighborhood.org to find out how you can support their mission to make live jazz available to neighborhood audiences and make a…

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Wednesday, April 2nd – 7pm
Writer Sayed Afzal Haider
The Dying Sun and Other Stories

From Chicago out of Pakistan, Afzal has been devoted to literature, to American literature in particular, since arriving here at the age of 19 in the 1960s. He came to study electrical engineering, but he was transfixed by women, baseball, literature… From the works of writers like Bernard Malamud, John Fowles, Albert Camus and many others, he took what he needed to become a writer himself. His novels and short stories, and his long editorship of the Chicago Quarterly Review, which he founded in 1994, come from that fascination with and devotion to the writer’s voice. His own voice is unique and profoundly wrought. We are pleased to have presented him, and to offer this video of an evening in his company with his friends and colleagues Elizabeth McKenzie, the novelist and Afzal’s co-editor at the Review, and Moazzam Sheikh, a writer of novels and stories and Afzal’s publisher at…

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This week’s fun…
a pushback against autocracy
and six cultural events from
Wednesday April 2nd to Sunday April 6th
Make Good Trouble!

No joke: It’s afternoon in America! Wake up! The joke, a bad one, is Donald Trump. Seriously: At noon today, Wednesday, April 2nd, and for 26 days in a row at noon, we’re going to turn on the tv at Bird & Beckett and play an hour’s worth of Senator Cory Booker’s speech that began Monday, March 31st and ended 25 hours later on April 1st. _________________ The usual weekly party at Bird & Beckett kicks off at 7pm Wednesday, April 2nd, when SFPL Western Addition branch librarian Moazzam Sheikh, a skilled writer of novellas and short stories, and Moazzam’s good friend, the acclaimed, perspicacious and quirky novelist Elizabeth McKenzie, host their mutual good friend from Chicago, the writer and editor Syed Afzal Haider, who will read from his recent volume of short stories (The Dying Sun, Weavers Press, 2024). Donations welcome, byob. _________________     Thursday at 7pm our…

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Sunday, March 30th – 8-10pm
The Ryan Ancheta Quartet

Trumpet player Ryan Ancheta is sneaking a quartet into the shop for a late show Sunday the 30th, with his mentor Marcus Shelby on bass, the veteran tho-still-young Greg Jacobs on piano and Ryan’s contemporary, Miles Turk on drums. Expect two blazing sets of bop, hard bop, post-bop and beyond! $20 cover charge, cash or venmo please. Call the shop for a reservation – 415-586-3733. And note that on Sunday April 6th, from 5-7pm, Ryan, a student at UC Berkeley out of RASOTA, will be back with Miles and three students from the San Francisco Conservatory of Music. Ryan’s quintet will stick around to run a jam session open to any student players who want to step up.

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Sunday, March 30th – 5-7pm
Jam Session!
hosted by the Vince Lateano Trio

You never know who might drop in. Maybe you! The Vince Lateano Trio will make you feel right at home! BYOB and a twenty for the trio.

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Saturday, March 29th – 7:30-9:30pm
An unnamable quartet plays ineffable jazz

Marc Caparone, cornet and trumpet. Dan Barrett, trombone and cornet. Jeff Hamilton, piano. Mikiya Matsuda, bass. $25 cover charge for adults / byob. Teens and students, $10. Kids free. The sweetest, most joyful, most satisfying, most rambunctious music you’ll ever hear is the creole jazz that flowered in New Orleans and floated up and down the Mississippi River in the first decades of the 1900s, when skilled and sophisticated musicians playing for polite society joined with rough and ready talents from the crescent city’s back of town to thrill a richly diverse populace gathering in the public squares, street parades, brothels, barrooms and riverboats of a thriving era. The Unnamable Quartet brings together four musicians steeped in the traditions, with dozens if not a hundred tunes at their fingertips, to make you realize the music has never gone away or lost its vast charm. If you like what you hear,…

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Friday, March 28th – 8:30-10pm
The Aaron Germain Quartet

Jesse Levit, saxophone. Matt Clark, piano. Aaron Germain, bass. Isaac Schwartz, drums. $20 cover charge per adult / byob. Student rate $10-15 sliding scale. cash or venmo; no credit cards. Reservations, call the shop at 415-586-3733. Aaron Germain, a unique voice on bass with a flexibility beyond compare, is well into his third decade working widely and constantly as hired gun, core band member and bandleader. This has led him through all sorts of adventures, as he’s traveled the world and learned from musical masters. Growing up in Massachusetts, he cut his teeth playing upright and electric bass in bands playing jazz, blues, funk, reggae, Senegalese mbalax and more, driving to New York, to Boston and all over New England. From the beginning he learned to be picky about quality, but not genre. Moving to San Francisco Bay Area in 2000, his adventures expanded. He entered the realms of Salsa…

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Friday, March 28th – 6-8pm
The Tony Johnson Quartet

Bob Kenmotsu, saxophone. Keith Saunders, piano. Eric Markowitz, bass. Tony Johnson, drums. $20 suggested donation per adult / byob. Teens and students, $10. Kids free. Tony Johnson has been a cornerstone of the San Francisco jazz scene since he hit town in 1959. Tony recorded on Riverside Records with singer Bev Kelly and saxophonist Pony Poindexter (“Bev Kelly in Person, Live at the Coffee Gallery,” 1960, produced by Orrin Keepnews); in 1964 was musical director of the Vagabonds at the Tropicana Hotel in Las Vegas, playing the Ed Sullivan Show with the band in 1964 on the same bill with Sammy Davis, Jr.; toured nationally with Earl “Fatha” Hines in 1971; played with Bobby Short at the Hungry Eye in North Beach and with Peggy Lee in 1973 at the Fairmont Hotel’s Venetian Room; toured and recorded with the Claude Williamson Trio; was in Mike Vax’s Great American Jazz Band…

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SUPPORT BIRD & BECKETT - DONATE TODAY!

Your donation to the Bird & Beckett Cultural Legacy Project helps us pay for a multitude of operating expenses necessary to present, promote and preserve local music, poetry, and more.

Help us keep the arts alive and thriving!

The Bird & Beckett Cultural Legacy Project was created in 2007 "to present, document and archive the creative work of significant living writers and musicians in the San Francisco Bay Area, for a neighborhood audience and future generations," continuing the work we began when the store was established in 1999.

We continue to present a full slate of programming of live music and poetry readings, and produce a literary journal and poetry chapbooks, and we seek and welcome your continued financial support by way of donations.

Click on "donate" in the navigation bar above. Better yet, make a check out to the “Bird & Beckett Cultural Legacy Project” and drop it off or mail it to:

Bird & Beckett Cultural Legacy Project
653 Chenery Street
San Francisco, CA 94131

Call us at (415) 586-3733 to find out how else you might lend your support.

____________

We're immensely appreciative of Jazz in the Neighborhood for having stepped in as our temporary fiscal sponsor for a few months, while we straightened out some paperwork to get nonprofit status restored to the BBCLP. We're happy to say that's been done, and all past, present, and future donations made directly to the BBCLP are fully tax-deductible!

TAKE OUR SURVEY

To take our SURVEY, click here, and help the BBCLP get to know you better! As Duke Ellington always said, we love you madly...

The Bird & Beckett Cultural Legacy Project

Our events are put on under the umbrella of the Bird & Beckett Cultural Legacy Project (the "BBCLP"). That's how we fund our ambitious schedule of 300 or so concerts and literary events every year.

The BBCLP is a [Read More ]

 


The Independent Musicians Alliance

Gigging musicians! You have nothing to lose but your lack of a collective voice to achieve fair wages for your work!
The IMA can be a conduit for you, if you join in to make it work.

https://www.independentmusiciansalliance.org/

Read more here - Andy Gilbert's Feb 25 article about the IMA from KQED's site

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