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Club Bluenote plaque, 2017. Photo by Herman Custodio.  

Club Bluenote plaque, 2017. Photo by Herman Custodio.
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Original JPG File

1798 × 1200 pixels (2.16 MP)

15.2 cm × 10.2 cm @ 300 PPI

1.7 MB

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Resource details

Resource ID

5269

Access

Open

Metadata
Default

Geo - Longitude

-79.382084

Geo - Latitude

43.658706

Credit Line

Photo by Herman Custodio

Date of Creation

2017

Program Category

Plaques

Rights

Herman Custodio

Address

372 Yonge Street, Toronto, ON M5G 2K9

Historical Themes

Black History, Entertainment and Leisure, Music and Performing Arts

Time Period

1954-1998

Plaque Text

The Club Bluenote was a small after-hours rhythm and blues dance hall that played a vital role in the Yonge Street music scene.

Owned by Al Steiner, the club was located near here at 372 Yonge Street for about 10 years until it closed in 1969. The club was later revived twice in Yorkville by Bill Balkou, Lou Balkou, Syd Markowitz, Jack Valianes, and George Olliver.

The original Club Bluenote launched the careers of Toronto artists such as Jay Jackson, Shawne Jackson, and Shirley Matthews. It supported regulars like Bobby Dean and the Gems, the Statlers, the Peepers, the Silhouettes (with Doug Riley and Steve Kennedy, ) and the Five Rogues, featuring Joey Chirowski, Don Elliot, Penti "Whitey" Glan, George Olliver, and Domenic Troiano.

The club was popular with well-known international artists such as Stevie Wonder, the Righteous Brothers, and the Supremes, who performed impromptu late-night sets at the club after giving concerts at major venues elsewhere in the city.

The musical style that emerged at the Club Bluenote and at other Yonge Street clubs was a unique blend of rock with rhythm and blues that became characteristic of the "Toronto Sound."

Caption

Club Bluenote plaque, 2017. Photo by Herman Custodio.

Location Data

Marker lat / long: 43.658706, -79.382084 (WGS84)

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