New York Home > Nightlife > Come Out And Play
Photo Credit: Jamie Chung
Published June 05, 2006
"Welcome to Minton's. It's Saturday night, and I know some of you are out on parole." And with that,
the music at the infamous Minton's Playhouse begins.
Forget lounge singers and velour-trimmed tuxes, jazz is served up good and raw at Minton's, the classic '30s
Harlem jazz house that discovered legends like Charlie Parker, Miles Davis, Dizzy Gillespie and Thelonious
Monk.
Shuttered down in '74 (after an unfortunate foray into disco), Minton's reopens this month with its original
giant neon sign blazing on the corner and small stage dusted off and ready to make more history. Inside,
settle in and order a Sugar Hill Golden Ale from Veronica, and kick back with the rest of the diverse,
laid-back crowd: Japanese businessmen, hipsters and, of course, old school Minton's patrons in suits and
cravats (with trumpets tucked under their arms).
The house bands blow some great jazz (like Eli and the Organizers, who roll in with an old wooden
organ on a dolly), but make sure to stay on for their famous after-hours jam sessions, when things get a
little crazy like they did back in the day. Guys in the audience start jumping onstage with their own
instruments and doing their thing (if you're getting ideas, we hope your "thing" doesn't involve a kazoo and
scatting).
According to the manager, you never know who's going to walk through the door. Unfortunately it'll never be
Miles, but at least you can be pretty sure it won't be Kenny G.
Minton's Playhouse
210 W. 118th St
(between St. Nicholas 7th Ave;)
Harlem
New York, NY 10026
212-864-8364
Minton's Playhouse
210 W. 118th St
(between St. Nicholas 7th Ave;)
Harlem
New York, NY 10026
212-864-8364