Location: | Accord Building B1, Shinjuku 2-12-4, Shinjuku-ku, Tokyo, Japan |
Type: | Nightclub |
Genre: | Jazz |
Opened: | 24 December 1965 |
Url: | http://www.pit-inn.com/index_e.html |
The is a jazz club in Shinjuku, Tokyo. The original opened in 1965 and was forced by demolition to close in 1992. It re-opened at a different site in Shinjuku later that year. DownBeat wrote in 2019 that the Pit Inn "is almost universally regarded as Japan's most important jazz club".[1]
The first Pit Inn was located in Shinjuku 3-chōme. It was named by its owner, Yoshitake Sato, who was a car enthusiast. The first manager was Goro Sakai, who had experience of running jazz clubs. The Pit Inn opened on 24 December 1965,[2] as a jazz coffee shop.[3] By March of the following year, it was hosting live jazz every Friday, Saturday and Sunday, and on other days was being let out to theatre groups and for happenings. Two years later, it became even more focused on jazz and was in the style of a Greenwich Village hangout.
From its early days, both domestic and international musicians played at the Pit Inn. In 1968, for instance, The Thad Jones/Mel Lewis Orchestra played there.[4] Other activities also took place: a photography exhibition in 1968 was an early example.[5] Some of the most prominent Japanese jazz musicians played at the club early in their careers. Many continue to play there regularly, including Terumasa Hino, Sadao Watanabe and Yōsuke Yamashita. Trumpeter Hino played there in 1969.[6] In 1970, the standard entrance charges were 450 Yen for the 2pm show and 500 Yen for the 7pm one, with one drink included.[7] It was described as "A comfortably dingy, often smoke-filled niche for the serious jazz fan [...] over the years it had been home to performances and recordings by some of the world's greatest jazz musicians". In January 1992, it was forced to close, as the building it was part of was being demolished.
The Pit Inn reopened on 5 July 1992, at a new location at the edge of Shinjuku 2-chōme.[8] It continued to offer an afternoon and an evening performance, with the former being for less-well-established musicians.[9] The fortieth anniversary celebrations featured performances by Hino, Watanabe, Yamashita, Keiko Lee, Otomo Yoshihide, John Zorn and others, playing in a nearby rented hall, as the club was too small to accommodate all the fans.
There have been other jazz clubs with the same name in other parts of Tokyo and Japan. The Roppongi Pit Inn was open from at least 1978,[10] and was at Shimei Building B1, Roppongi 3-17-7.[11] In 2003, it contained wooden pews and chairs, and "ceiling-high speakers angle[d] in to cover the entire audience space with crisp sound resolution and exceptional clarity".[12] It closed on 26 July 2004.[13]
An asterisk (*) indicates that the album was recorded at the Roppongi Pit Inn.
Year recorded | Leader/Band | Title | Label | |
---|---|---|---|---|
1974 | At "Pit Inn" | CBS/Sony | ||
1974 | Pit Inn | East Wind | ||
1978* | It's A Poppin' Time | RCA Records | ||
1979*[14] [15] | Smokin' in the Pit | Nippon Columbia | ||
1979* | KYLYN Live | Better Days | ||
1979*[16] | Blues Show Live at Pit Inn | Yupiteru | ||
1980*[17] | The Blues Show! Live at Pit Inn 1980 | |||
1984 | Elvin Jones Jazz Machine Live at Pit Inn | Polydor | ||
1985 | and Yōsuke Yamashita | Piano Duo Live at Pit Inn | Village | |
1986 | Live at Pit Inn | King | ||
1986 | Music For Unknown Five Musicians | King | ||
1988 | Cosmo Omnibus Imagiable Illusion | DIW | ||
1989* | Joy | Moon Records | ||
1990 (released)*[18] | Heart of Stone | BMG Victor | ||
1990 (released)*[19] | Go Back to de Basic Thing | BMG Victor | ||
1991 (released)* | Unchained Rhythm | BMG Victor | ||
1992 (released)* | My Innocent Time | BMG Victor | ||
1992 | Live in Japan | Jimco | ||
1992 | Tribute to John Coltrane "A Love Supreme" | Columbia | ||
1994 | So What | Venus | ||
1994 | The Sound of Nature | Universal | ||
2001 | and TOY | Live at Pit Inn | Q-Train | |
2005 | Explosion | P-Jazz | ||
2005 | Live! | Libra | ||
2005 | Live – Shapes in Sound | Video Arts | ||
2007 | Shinjuku Crawl | Smalltown Superjazzz | ||
2007 | Shinjuku Growl | Smalltown Superjazzz | ||
2009 | Live at Pit Inn | Marshmallow | ||
2009 | Cut the Rope | Libra | ||
2010 | , Heinz Geisser, Shiro Onuma | Dancing the Body of Time | Cadence Jazz | |
2010 | , Keiji Haino, Jim O'Rourke | Two City Blues 1 | Trost | |
2010 | , Keiji Haino, Jim O'Rourke | Two City Blues 2 | Trost | |
2011 | Live at Pit Inn | Erato | ||
2012 | and Paal Nilssen-Love | Extended Duos | Audiographic | |
2012 | (Akira Sakata) | Made in Japan | Doubtmusic | |
2013 | and Paal Nilssen-Love | Spring Snow | PNL | |
2014 | Straight Edge | Pit Inn | ||
2014 | Live at Shinjuku Pit Inn | Pit Inn | ||
2014 | This Is New | Pit Inn |
Bibliography