Karen Pomer
-----------

to me

(JAI:  Hard to overestimate the importance of Ed Pearl and his "Ash Grove" 
music hall to the culture of the movement in LA during 'The '60's.)

https://www.latimes.com/ entertainment-arts/music/ story/2021-02-09/ed-pearl- 
dead-ash-grove ( 
https://www.latimes.com/entertainment-arts/music/story/2021-02-09/ed-pearl-dead-ash-grove
 )

Ed Pearl, whose Ash Grove nightclub was at the heart of L.A.’s ’60s music 
scene, dies

Ash Grove owner Ed Pearl has died.
(From Walter Lippmann)
By NARDINE SAAD ( https://www.latimes.com/people/nardine-saad ) STAFF WRITER
FEB. 9, 2021 4:14 PM PT
Ed Pearl, who owned the landmark folk and blues hot spot the Ash Grove in the 
1960s before briefly relocating it to the Santa Monica Pier, has died from 
complications of COVID-19 and pneumonia. Pearl died Sunday in a Los Angeles 
hospital, his daughter, Jolie Pearl, said. Pearl, who had been living in an 
assisted living facility with Alzheimer’s disease for about a year, was 88. The 
soft-spoken East L.A. native brought raw blues and even rawer Appalachian folk 
music to the heart of Los Angeles, when the Ash Grove was housed on Melrose 
Avenue in what’s now West Hollywood. The venue became a training ground for 
artists such as Ry Cooder, Jackson Browne and Linda Ronstadt. The club also 
housed a record store and a music school.

Rising From the Ash’s Ashes ( 
https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1996-06-30-ca-19799-story.html )

June 30, 1996

Pearl believed part of the club’s appeal was that it showcased a variety of 
regional and ethnic music, from gospel to jazz, Jewish to Latino, and presented 
it with respect. The club “educated a lot of people to the cultures of 
America,” Pearl told The Times in 1993 ( 
https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1993-11-07-we-54313-story.html ). “It 
legitimized the American potpourri and gave it a dignified stage.” Unabashed 
about his politics, Pearl, who helped found the Peace & Freedom Party in 1967 
as the Vietnam War deepened, made enemies along the way. He long believed that 
a series of arson-related fires at his club were attempts to stop his social 
activism. Under Pearl’s direction, the Ash Grove was billed as the “West Coast 
university of folk music.” Hundreds of artists appeared there ( 
https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1996-08-12-ca-33518-story.html ) , 
ranging from New Orleans zydeco master Clifton Chenier to Jim Croce, Johnny 
Cash and the Byrds. The Ash Grove hosted events and was a meeting place for 
people involved in a variety of causes, including the emerging civil rights 
movement. It served as the center of Los Angeles’ highly influential folk music 
scene when it was in West Hollywood from 1958 until the 1973, when a fire 
closed it there for good. “We all came in on the kind of progressive, political 
stream to the music,” said his younger brother Bernie Pearl, who washed dishes 
and booked acts at the Ash Grove. “That it was not about commercial music — [it 
was about] the union songs and the freedom songs — it was never strictly about 
business. You had to do business, but he took chances on somebody because he 
liked the music. He would bring in people fresh off the farm in Appalachians 
and he would put them on.”

Calling for an Encore : Man Behind the Ash Grove Awaits the Rebirth of 
Legendary Club ( 
https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1993-11-07-we-54313-story.html )

Nov. 7, 1993

Born Edwin Morton Pearl on May 24, 1932, Pearl grew up in Boyle Heights. He was 
the middle of five children born to parents who had both fled the violent 
attacks on Jews in Europe after the Nazis took power in Germany. The two met at 
a Jewish youth social club in Los Angeles. His father, a tool and die maker, 
was an intellectual who was not religious, though his mother was. “Growing up 
in Boyle Heights, there was a lot of different racial and ethnic communities 
there,” Pearl’s daughter Jolie said. “He had a lot of different kinds of 
friends, and that set the stage for him to be open to other cultures. I got the 
feeling that he always enjoyed music. He was curious about life and determined 
to make his own way — through music or social activism.” His older sister, 
Bernice, hosted the Ash Grove’s predecessors — the famed hootenannies — at her 
home in the early 1950s. Pearl was attending UCLA at the time and was a member 
of the university’s folk song club that produced concerts, including Pete 
Seeger’s appearance at the university while he was blacklisted. “That was 
probably his formal entree into combining music and politics,” his daughter 
said. According to letters reviewed by his daughter, Pearl would stay up all 
night having discussions and playing music instead of studying. He ultimately 
dropped out and convinced several family members to help him finance the Ash 
Grove, which began as a coffeehouse before evolving into a shrine for the 
emerging folk and rock musicians of the 1960s.

Ed Pearl
(From Bernice Pearl)
As years went by, Pearl struggled with the corporate evolution of the music 
industry, having to book talent through agents, managers and other middlemen 
rather than picking up the phone and convincing an artist directly to appear. 
After years of delay, the club finally reopened on the renovated Santa Monica 
Pier in 1996, but its beachside tenure was short-lived. It shut in 1997 ( 
https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1987-12-20-ca-30294-story.html ) when 
the city evicted the beleaguered nightspot. ( 
https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1991-06-13-ca-811-story.html ) During 
the two decades between the closing of the original Ash Grove and its reopening 
on the pier, Pearl made a living producing music and theater, including 
productions for the San Francisco Mime Troupe and El Teatro Campesino. In 1997, 
Pearl was awarded the Center for the Study of Political Graphics’ Culture of 
Liberation award. A mixed-media piece he wrote on apartheid was performed in 
1987 at high schools and junior high schools throughout the Los Angeles Unified 
School District. His venue eventually lived on as the Ash Grove Foundation, a 
philanthropic organization that stages concerts, lectures and community 
performances to support young artists. Pearl is survived by his daughter and 
grand-daughter, Ari Pearl-Butler, as well as Bernice Pearl and two brothers, 
Stanley Pearl and Sherman Pearl.


-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
Groups.io Links: You receive all messages sent to this group.
View/Reply Online (#6285): https://groups.io/g/marxmail/message/6285
Mute This Topic: https://groups.io/mt/80547766/21656
-=-=-
POSTING RULES & NOTES
#1 YOU MUST clip all extraneous text when replying to a message.
#2 This mail-list, like most, is publicly & permanently archived.
#3 Subscribe and post under an alias if #2 is a concern.
-=-=-
Group Owner: [email protected]
Unsubscribe: https://groups.io/g/marxmail/leave/8674936/1316126222/xyzzy 
[[email protected]]
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-


Reply via email to