Margaret Murphy-Webb vividly remembers the conversation she had with legendary Chicago jazz saxophonist Von Freeman in the back of the now shuttered New Apartment Lounge in 2010. Freeman, who had begun to fall ill, had a simple request for his mentee and longtime friend.
âI said, âVonski, whatâs the matter with you?ââ Murphy-Webb remembered. âHe said, âNothingâs wrong with me, Iâm okay…but I canât do this the rest of my life. This has to continue; you gotta keep it going.ââ
Freeman grew up in Greater Grand Crossing, and his upbringing was steeped in Jazz. His father was close friends with Louis Armstrong. As a teenager Freeman studied under the tutelage of famous Chicago music educator Captain Walter Dyett at DuSable High School. Freeman would go on to record two albums as a sideman for famed vocalist Kurt Elling while also having his own distinguished career as a bandleader.
During his career, which included playing with a number of greats and touring, he remained committed to mentoring young South Side musicians, ushering in the generations that followed him.
Over the course of forty years, the banging of drums, the wailing of saxophones, and the shrieking of trumpets could be heard roaring out of South Side music clubs every Tuesday night.
And for forty years, amid the cacophony of musicians fighting for improvisational supremacy, the clinking of glasses, and chatter of club patrons, this is where you could find Freeman every Tuesday night.
âIt was the place on the South Side to go for a jam session,â Murphy-Webb said. âEven the North Side[rs] because whenever I think about all the North Siders who would hang out, like Mike Allamana, Matt Ferguson and Michael Raynor, who ended up being the trio that played with [Von] until he passed away, all those guys were North Siders.â
Freeman asked Murphy-Webb to carry on his legacy. A few months before his death, she got her first chance to do that when Chicago multi-instrumentalist Anderson Edwards called her up to try to convince her that it was time to start a weekly jam session of their own.
It took a little bit of prodding, but Murphy-Webb finally said yes.
âHe goes, âMargaret, letâs reignite the jam.â I said, âOkay, Iâm in,ââ she said.
Freeman passed away in August of 2012. That same year, Murphy-Webb started her weekly jazz jam at the 50 Yard Line, nestled between Chatham and Greater Grand Crossing at 69 E. 75th St.
Like Freemanâs jam, Murphy-Webbâs ran every Tuesday night. âI didnât have any money, but the musicians played for free,â she said. âIt was very popular, and that lasted for about two years.â
In 2015, Murphy-Webb founded the South Side Jazz Coalition (SSJC), a nonprofit that preserves and promotes jazz on the South Side while also providing public access to jazz with free programming.
Now going nine years strong, the SSJC has fulfilled these goals through hosting jam sessions, live outdoor shows, and even community service events as well.
From day one, a staple of the SSJCâs live programming has been the second Tuesday Jazz Jam, held monthly at St. Moses The Black Parish, located at 7749 S. Vernon Ave.
The Coalition commissions a band to play for the first hour, then opens up the stage to the public. Along with live music, the jam events also feature dance acts and spoken word poetry.
âI think itâs important that youâre able to express yourself through the arts,â Murphy-Webb said. âEverybody is still recovering from what happened to the world. Thereâs got to be some way that youâre able to express yourself other than wilding out and tearing up the town.â
The 2nd Tuesday Jazz Jam quickly caught on with the jazz community. By 2018, Murphy-Webb noticed the crowds getting bigger and bigger, until the COVID-19 pandemic shuttered the live music scene in early 2020. Instead of letting this kill the organizationâs momentum, Murphy-Webb used the situation to her advantage, starting a new, socially distanced outdoor live music series called Jazzân On The Steps, which also takes place at St. Moses The Black Parish.
The event has only grown more successful as people have been able to come outside again post pandemic.
âItâs become even more popular because itâs outdoors,â Murphy-Webb said. âOn a beautiful day, whatâs better than being outside listening to a free concert [with] your little secret glass of wine and crackers? Everybody likes a picnic.â
Murphy-Webb said sheâs seen more of a demand for jazz in local communities after the pandemic.
âPeople donât want to go downtown the way that they used to,â she said. âThey donât want to deal with the traffic, they donât want to deal with the parking, they donât want to deal with having to walk.â
Murphy-Webb attributes part of the Coalitionâs growth and success to partnerships it has formed with other organizations throughout the city. While St. Moses The Black Parish has hosted the 2nd Tuesday Jazz Jam and Jazzân On The Steps, the South Side Jazz Coalition has also teamed up with Night Out in the Parksâa Chicago Park District series that puts on cultural events in parks throughout the cityâto put on three different shows at three separate parks on the South Side this summer.
The SSJC has also partnered with a number of neighborhood block clubs to put on their JazzâN On The Block series, a collaboration which brings live jazz directly to South Side neighborhoods, serving as a backdrop to neighborhood block parties.
Murphy-Webb said partnerships help most with funding and getting the word out. âWhen I partnered with Night Out in the Park, they told me they would fund us having shows in the park and help us promote it,â Murphy-Webb said. âPartnerships and collaborations and saving moneyâŠ. It really makes a big difference.â
Like a lot of smaller organizations, the SSJC faces its share of challenges. Murphy-Webb said particular issues the organization has faced are finding venues for some of their events, along with funding. Renting a venue can cost as much as $800-1,500. And because of its size and limited budget, SSJC canât afford to hire grant writers.
âYouâre asking somebody who has an organization like mine to compete with somebody who has an organization like the Jazz Institute [of Chicago]âŠthey have writers who write all their grants,â Murphy-Webb said. âThey have a staff; I donât have a staff. Everything thatâs done is done by me.â
While grants can be hard to come by, Murphy-Webb said a lot of Coalitionâs funding has come from the Department of Cultural Affairs and Special Eventsâsome seventy percent, by her estimation.
The organization has also secured a multi-year grant from the Arts Work Fund, along with funding from an anonymous organization for the last four years.
Murphy-Webb said other organizations have come and gone over the years. Throughout, the SSJCâs mission has remained the same: to put on free live jazz shows, put musicians to work, and bring jazz to underserved South Side communities.
The Coalition has also been involved in community service and social causes. SSCJ volunteers have delivered groceries and gift cards to single mothers on Thanksgiving, worked with neighborhood block clubs to do community cleanups, and help out at St. Moses The Blackâs food bank every Wednesday morning.
âWe want to be part of the community,â Murphy-Webb said. âItâs much more than just presenting jazz; you have to be part of your community.â
The second Tuesday Jazz Jam will continue to run monthly through the end of the year. The South Side Jazz Coalition will also throw three Night Out in the Park shows this summer, including a show celebrating vocalist Dinah Washingtonâs one-hundredth birthday at the end of August. Its Jazzân On The Steps series runs on the fourth Sunday of each month through the end of August as well. There will also be a Thanksgiving and Christmas show towards the end of the year.
And what would Freeman say if he saw the work that the South Side Jazz Coalition is doing today?
ââBaby, this is bombastic!ââ Murphy-Webb said. âHe would be so proud that we still have a place where people can go and they donât have to pay a dime to walk through the door, and a place for anybody to come in and express themselves.â
Ryan Rosenberger is a Chicago-based music journalist who has been covering the scene since 2018. His work can be found in the Columbia Chronicle, These Days Mag, the Weekly, and more.