Blue Note Jazz Club Now Home to a Yamaha Grand

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (April 2, 2009) — One of the world's most famous jazz venues and a clear favorite destination for jazz musicians is now home to a Yamaha C7 grand piano. The original Blue Note Jazz Club in New York City selected the respected 7' 6" Concert Collection Grand Piano as its official piano of choice.

"I'm thrilled we were able to fulfill the venues need for a piano that would meet the demands of the world renowned talent coming in and out of the legendary doors at Blue Note by providing a C7 grand piano," comments Chris Gero, vice president of Yamaha Corporate Artist Affairs, Inc. "We consider it an honor that they chose Yamaha as their official house piano."

Since its inception in 1981, Blue Note has become one of the premier jazz clubs in the world and a cultural institution in Greenwich Village. Owner and founder Danny Bensusan had a vision to create a jazz club in Greenwich Village that would treat deserving artists with respect, while allowing patrons to see the world's finest jazz musicians in a close, comfortable setting. Artists who had stopped playing in jazz clubs decades before, such as Sarah Vaughn, Lionel Hampton, Dizzy Gillespie, Stanley Turrentine, Oscar Peterson, Ray Brown, and Tito Puente, soon called Blue Note home.

Jazz is undoubtedly America's music, and while Blue Note strives to preserve the history of jazz, the club is a place where progression and innovation – the foundations of jazz – are encouraged and practiced on a nightly basis. In addition to the main acts that feature the likes of Chick Corea, McCoy Tyner, Joe Lovano, John Scofield, and Chris Botti, Blue Note has introduced the Monday Night Series and the bi-weekly Late Night Groove Series to showcase New York's up-and-coming jazz, soul, hip-hop, R&B and funk artists. Blue Note has been instrumental in encouraging the development of Greenwich Village's local musicians by giving them a chance to perform in one of the world's finest venues.

Over the years, Blue Note has been an economic engine for Greenwich Village, bringing in jazz fans from all over the world. The club receives rave reviews on a weekly basis in New York's daily newspapers such as The New York Times and in international travel guides and magazines. What makes Blue Note so special is that on a given night, anything can happen. It is not uncommon to see the likes of Stevie Wonder, Tony Bennett, Liza Minelli, and Quincy Jones get called up on stage from the audience to sit in. Blue Note gives artists the musical freedom they deserve, and jazz fans get a chance to see the most unlikely combination of stars night after night on the Blue Note stage.

After twenty-five years of success, Blue Note continues to carry the torch for jazz into the 21st century in the cultural heart of New York, Greenwich Village.

For more information on Yamaha artists or the extensive Yamaha product catalog, please visit www.yamahaartists.com.

Blue Note Jazz Club Now Home to a Yamaha Grand
— New York's Legendary Jazz Venue Chooses a C7 as Official House Piano —