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History
of the UCO Jazz Lab
A couple of years ago,
Gary Gabrel, president of Hideaway Pizza, considered it a great
coincidence that the University of Central Oklahoma's Jazz
Lab Department was looking for a home for its jazz studies
program while he was looking for a place in Edmond to house
a new Hideaway Pizza.
When developer Mark Neighbors donated land at South Litler
and Fifth Street to the university through the UCO Foundation,
UCO President Roger Webb's dream to build a jazz lab and
an evening performance venue began to unfold.
Webb believed there was a definite market for a site that
would serve as a teaching facility by day and as an entertainment
spot by night.
After all, UCO's jazz studies program has grown, since its
foundation in 1974 by Dr. Kent Kidwell, from one 20-piece
jazz band to it current program which includes three 20-piece
jazz bands and numerous small groups.
Partnering with Hideaway Pizza was an ideal fit for a jazz
lab. Audiences could eat pizza and enjoy beverages while
listening to jazz and other entertainment such as blues,
pop, country, bluegrass, ethnic, classical, and even a taste
of Broadway.
The Jazz Lab became an actuality thanks to a creative collaboration
with the university, the UCO Foundation, the Neighbor's family,
the Edmond Economic Authority, and the City of Edmond.
With Edmond's growth and emerging reputation for good restaurants,
the linkage between Cafe 501, Boulevard Steakhouse, and now
Hideaway Pizza and an evening performance spot was a natural
extension and quality move for both the university and the
Edmond community.
The daytime facility–led by its appointed director,
longtime faculty member, and renowned jazz musician Lee Rucker–opened
for its 60 jazz students at the beginning of the spring 2002
semester.
The facility is comprised of practice rooms, faculty offices,
a state-of-the-art recording studio, a box office, seating
area, stage, and an encircled plaza area outdoors for outdoor
performances.
The creative team from
Hornbeek Larsson Architects–David
Hornbeek, Tony Blatt and Allison Perkins–designed the
Lab to carry out Webb's vision to give the place a look that
is a cross between Beale Street in Memphis and the French
Quarter in New Orleans.
The Jazz
Lab is the fulfillment of a dream and an excellent companion
to UCO's Broadway Tonight series, StrawHat Music Theatre,
and the many cultural music, theater and dance performances
offered by UCO's College of Arts, Media & Design. |
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