A great, wearable tribute to that most famous of 1930's Harlem night
spots the Cotton Club. While some venues in the Harlem of the
Prohibition era were “black and tans,” meaning they welcomed a racially
mixed clientele, the Cotton Club was more typical: a club owned by white
gangsters that catered to a strictly white crowd. The draw, perversely,
was an elaborate floor show featuring only the best African-American
dancers, singers and bands. In a room decked out in a sort of
quasi-antebellum plantation motif, the house orchestra starred in a show
featuring a chorus line, tap dancers, scantily-clad girls, and singers,
all performing exclusive songs and arrangements.
The most famous
of the house bands, and the orchestra that made the Cotton Club famous,
was that of Duke Ellington. Ellington’s band was succeeded by Cab
Calloway’s orchestra, and then a series of lesser-known acts who ushered
in an era of decline after the repeal of Prohibition in 1933. In many
ways, the Cotton Club represents the worst sorts of tendencies in both
society and culture. The genius that was the orchestral skill of
Ellington was buried under the mundane needs of the shuck ‘n’ jive revue
while he labored here, and the reality of an entirely black cast,
waitstaff and kitchen crew working for white owners and a whites-only
customer base eventually became unbearable. The club was already in
decline when it finally integrated, and a move downtown never really
worked out, but in many ways, the Cotton Club defines the era called the
Harlem Renaissance.
These are black, Fruit of the Loom 4.7 oz. SoftSpun crew
T-shirts, available in medium, large or extra large. Imprint is vivid, full-color pigment ink heat transfer. Wash these items in
cold water ONLY, inside out, and dry on the lowest (coolest) temperature setting.
DO NOT IRON.