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!

Thursday, October 26th – 7-9pm
A reading to celebrate the new issue of the
Haight Ashbury Literary Journal
in memorium Indigo Joanne Hotchkiss

Indigo Joanne Hotchkiss, to whom this reading is dedicated, was a co-founder in 1979 of the Haight Ashbury Literary Journal. Co-editors Alice Elizabeth Rogoff and César Love co-host and participate in this reading, which will feature local poets who have poems in the current issue — Ed Mycue, Kitty Costello, Nellie Wong, Karen Melander-Magoon, Rafael Pineda, Antoinette Vella Payne, Cesar Love, Alice Elizabeth Rogoff, John Rowe, Ellen Frank , Eva Helene Stern, Aurelia , Lorca, Dan Richman and Phyllis Klein. Free admission; bring food and drink to share. Donations to support the Haight Ashbury Literary Journal are welcome and appreciated.

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Tuesday, October 24th – 7pm
Poet Robin Michel book release reading
with Kevin Dublin & Michael McNevin

  Join us for a celebration of Robin Michel’s new collection of poems, Beneath a Strawberry Night Sky (Raven & Wren Press, 2023). Free. Refreshments provided. “It has taken nearly three decades to get this book ready for prime time,” says R0bin. “Earlier versions of these poems, with the exception of two, were written during the second half of my first marriage, the separation and the divorce. Compiling these poems into a collection is my way of honoring what we once had, grieving its loss and finding forgiveness. Although we considered ourselves adults, my first husband and I were children when we met, married and became parents.” Robin Michel (Pedersen) was born in Utah and moved to Fremont, California at the age of 17. After her first marriage ended, Michel returned to school to complete her undergraduate work at Saint Mary’s College, and later, a Master of Arts in Educational…

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Sunday, October 22nd – 4pm to 6pm
A Tribute to George DiQuattro

Vocalist David Gonzalez has pulled in a couple worthy associates from his late ’60s & ’70s gang — drummer Vince Lateano and bassist Peter Barshay — to celebrate a piano player who was central to the hip ‘n happenin’ latin jazz funk rock world of the Bay Area in the era, with young Matt Clark doing the duties on the keys… Bring your memories or your curiosity, or just your yen for a fun little jazz date sprinkled with anecdotes about a special time, and join the fun.   George DiQuattro was born on January 19, 1939 in San Francisco. He grew up in the North Beach neighborhood, went to Galileo High School, was a U.S. Marine veteran and became a professional jazz pianist. George was hired to join the band Azteca in the late 1960s, a Latin Rock collective of musicians ranging from varied backgrounds, cultures, and genres. Boasting…

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Saturday, October 21st – 7:30-9:30pm
Saúl Sierra Latin Jazz Quartet

Four master musicians perform iconic classics and standards of the Afro Latin repertoire. Marco Díaz – piano , trumpet Julio Pérez – percussion Carlos Caro – percussion Saúl Sierra – bass $20 cover charge (cash please) reservations: 415-586-3733 byob click here to hear Saúl’s last Bird & Beckett outting https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dRB5kOu1ST4 Saúl Sierra was born and raised in Mexico City, where he started playing professionally in 1990. He moved to Boston Mass. in 1995 and attended the Berklee College of Music, graduating in 1999 with a major in Performance. His teachers at Berklee included Oscar Stagnaro, Rich Appleman, Daniel Morris, and Jim Stinnet. He received the US Scholarship tour award and the Outstanding Performer award at Berklee. As a resident of the San Francisco Bay Area since the fall of 1999, Saúl has performed, toured or recorded with Poncho Sanchez, Paquito D’ Rivera, Zakir Hussain, Arturo Sandoval, Jerry Gonzales, Jerry Medina,…

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Friday late show, October 20th – 8:30-10pm
The Peter Zak Trio

Peter Zak, piano Marcos Varela, bass Sylvia Cuenca, drums $20 cover charge, byob Peter’s newly released recording, One Mind, is a close collaboration with bassist Marcos Varela, in a quartet that includes Billy Drummond on drums and acclaimed saxophonist Seamus Blake. The album features several new compositions and arrangements, and veers into some surprising musical paths. Born in 1965, in Los Angeles, he grew up in Columbus and Kent, Ohio. When he was five, his mother taught him the basics of piano playing and reading music, and after six months, he began a decade-long series of private lessons, including a period with internationally renowned concert pianist Margaret Baxtresser. After the family moved to Oakland when he was 16, Peter developed an interest in jazz when his high school band director showed him how to play the chord changes to Stella by Starlight. Studies with Susan Muscarella, now president of the…

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Friday, October 20th – 6-8pm
jazz in the bookshop Friday happy hour show
Scott Foster / Sheldon Brown Duo

Guitar and Saxophone Explorations The evening will feature an eclectic mix of jazz, original and improvised music for guitar and saxophone in an intimate duo setting. Scott and Sheldon are reuniting after a long hiatus and say they’re looking forward to sharing work from their collaboration 25 years ago and updating their work together with developments that have sprung up in the interim.  Says Sheldon, they’ll play “some tunes of his, some tunes of mine, a couple Andrew Hill tunes, a couple Choros, a Don Byas tune, some Mingus stuff…” and he promises they’ll have a few surprises by show time Friday the 20th.   Bring a friend, bring the kids, bring the grandfolks… all welcome. Pay what you can — a twenty is the sweet spot if you’re here for the show and can afford it, but stay for however long suits you and pay what you like. byob,…

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Friday to Sunday October 20-22: Four great shows!

Scott Foster & Sheldon Brown play the early show, Friday the 20th from 6-8pm, reactivating a duo project that’s long overdue! From 8:30 to 10pm, the Peter Zak Trio — with Marcos Varela on bass and Sylvia Cuenca on drums — plays the late show. Saturday evening at 7:30, it’s bassist Saúl Sierra’s Latin Jazz Quartet, with Marco Díaz – piano & trumpet and percussionists Julio Pérez and Carlos Caro. Sunday at 4pm, come out for a tribute to pianist George DiQuattro, a key player on the local latin rock (Azteca) & jazz scenes in the late 1960s, 1970s and 1980s. Vocalist David Gonzalez, drummer Vince Lateano and Peter Barshay — all bandstand colleagues of George’s in the day — are joined by Matt Clark on piano. Byob and a twenty for the band to any of these shows and enjoy the live culture. The culture is what we love…

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Tuesday, October 17th – 7pm
Book event
Home is Here: Practicing Antiracism with the Engaged Eightfold Path, author Rev. Liên Shutt

Rev. Liên Shutt is a recognized leader in the movement that breaks through the wall of American white-centered convert Buddhism to welcome people of all backgrounds into a contemporary, engaged Buddhism. As an ordained Zen priest, licensed social worker and longtime educator/teacher of Buddhism, Shutt represents new leadership at the nexus of spirituality and social justice, offering a special warm welcome to Asian Americans, all BIPOC, LGBTQIA+, immigrants, and others seeking a ‘home’ in the midst of North American society’s reckoning around racism, sexism, homophobia and xenophobia. Shutt was a co-founder of Buddhists of Color in 1998 and founder of Access to Zen in 2014. As the creator, producer, and host, she is launching a podcast series Opening Dharma Access: Listening to BIPOC Teachers with Kaira Jewel Lingo and Lama Karma Yeshe Chodron. Home is Here builds on foundational Buddhist teachings–the Four Noble Truths and the Eightfold Path–offering an intersectional…

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Sunday, October 15th – 5:30pm
The Vince Lateano Trio

  Ben Stolorow, piano Peter Barshay, bass Vince Lateano, drums Pay what you will; $20 suggested. Byob. Reservations, call 415-586-3733 __________________ Leader & drummer Vince Lateano has been an invaluable part of the San Francisco scene since he came to the City in the mid-1960s. He quickly found his place in the local jazz scene, playing, recording and touring with Vince Guaraldi, subbing around town for John Markham when Markham went on the road with Sinatra and other major acts, and working extensively with Cal Tjader, Eddie Duran, Chet Baker, Clare Fisher and a host of others through the years. Later, all through the 1990s ’til it closed as such in 2003, he was the house drummer at Jazz at Pearl’s in North Beach, playing with his own trio several nights a week and backing up any number of musicians appearing as headliners on the weekends. He’s rolled on from…

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Saturday, October 14th – 7:30pm
The Charles Thomas Quartet

Bassist Charles Thomas has a long history on the Bird & Beckett bandstand, playing bebop, bossas and standards as well as originals with any number of combos, and often leading his own. His performing career has run the gamut from R&B to funk to hard bop and more.  Tonight, it’s jazz in a straight ahead mode with Ben Ball on saxophone, Steve Carter on piano and Michael Spencer on drums. $20 cover charge, byob. Reservations, call 415-586-3733 Charles Thomas was born in San Francisco and grew up in the Fillmore District. He started playing cello in junior high school, but his music teacher needed more bass players and thus, the conversion was made. From there, he picked up the guitar, piano, and drums. He studied a variety of musical styles, formally and informally, from Fillmore blues and San Francisco acid rock/funk, to classical and jazz, graduating with degrees in music,…

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Friday, October 13th – 8:30pm
The Zodiac Suite Reassured
Bassist Jeong Lim Yang and her trio
play music of the legendary
Mary Lou Williams

  Jeong Lim Yang, bassist and leader | Santiago Leibson, pianist | Jon Arkin, drummer | $20 cover charge; byob | reservations, call 415-202-4870 | _____________________ Pianist Mary Lou Williams’ rise to acclaim began in earnest in 1929 at the age of 19 with Andy Kirk and His Clouds of Joy, a territory band out of Kansas City. She remained a key figure in jazz until her death in 1981. Her career encapsulates the history of the music. With the Clouds of Joy, she became known as “The Lady Who Swings the Band,” and it was said that on occasion she’d play tunes on piano with one hand while notating band arrangements with the other, an ability she developed remembering Lovie Austin at work in vaudeville shows that she attended as a young girl in Pittsburgh. Using both hands, Mary Lou Williams was legendary and well loved from the start,…

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Two shows this Friday, October 13th!
note the new start times:
6-8pm: Eric & the In Crowd
8:30-10pm: The Jeong Lim Yang Trio

Going forward, there’s a new, 6pm start time for the Friday Happy Hour Jazz in the Bookshop show! A 21-year tradition, started October 2002! Eric & the In Crowd entertain the neighborhood every second Sunday, and this time out, October 13th, bassist Simon Planting and drummer Mark Rosengarden join pianist/band leader Eric Shifrin to regale you with tunes from Jelly Roll Morton to Fats Waller to Cole Porter to Art Tatum, and a few novelty numbers thrown in for good measure. For these 6pm Friday shows, we’ll be leaving the lights up for browsing and the kids’ section accessible to make for comfortable browsing and much needed socializing (do hush on those sensitive ballads, though!). You’ll still find cushioned chairs down front for those who want to train their eyes on the musicians and their ears on the music! Bring something to sip if you care to. And though we…

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October 13-15
Nothing but jazz and joy!

Starting with this Friday’s “jazz in the bookshop” happy hour show…a 21-year “end of the work week” tradition at Bird & Beckett…we’ll start the jazz at 6pm instead of 5:30, and will keep the lights up ’til the last couple of tunes, so the kids can read and the adults can see each other to socialize and blow off some steam! The “work week”  isn’t such a clear cut thing as it once was, so we’ll just make it a little more comfortable in the little ways we can! Same great jazz from great Bay Area jazz musicians playing for your pleasure (and to pay their rent). If you can afford it, bring a twenty for the band and a little something to sip if you like. Something to nibble is fine, too; just respect the books, the carpet and your new friends in the seats around you! First Fridays,…

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Sunday, October 8th – 8pm
The Schimscheimer Family Trio

Would someone tell these kids we’re having a heatwave? Kasey Knudsen, reeds Michael Coleman, piano Jon Arkin, drums Byob and a twenty for the band! It’s a belated album release. You know, the thing. Michael’s based back east. That complicates things. He’s on a redeye back tonight, so no encores! Show ends at 9:30! Get ’em while they’re hot. Get demystified: https://schimscheimerfamilytriomusic.com/ The new album: https://schimscheimerfamilytrio.bandcamp.com/album/genogram

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Sunday, October 8th – 2pm
Jorge Argueta’s Caravan to the North
an author event with music by
Jose Cuellar and Francisco Herrera

Jorge Argueta’s Caravan to the North: Misael’s Long Walk (Groundwood Books, 2024) is a novel in verse told through the eyes and heart of Misael Martínez, a Salvadoran boy whose family joins the caravan heading north to the United States. We learn all the different reasons why people feel the need to leave — the hope that lies behind their decision, but also the terrible sadness of leaving home. We learn about how far and hard the trip is, but also about the kindness of those along the way. Finally, once the caravan arrives in Tijuana, Misael and those around him are relieved. They think they have arrived at the goal of the trip — to enter the United States. But then tear gas, hateful demonstrations, force and fear descend on these vulnerable people. The border is closed. The book ends with Misael dreaming of El Salvador. With art by…

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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." We've been doing that very thing for more than a decade and a half, 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 through our fiscal sponsor, Jazz in the Neighborhood.

Click on "donate" in the navigation bar above. Better yet, send or drop off a check made out to our fiscal sponsor, Jazz in the Neighborhood, with BBCLP in the memo line. Our mailing address is:

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.

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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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