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Bill’s Blues faces last call without fundraising

By Ali Elkin

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Published: Thursday, November 5, 2009

Updated: Thursday, November 5, 2009

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Bill Gilmore, of Bill's Blues. Ali Elkin/The Daily Northwestern

The stage was dark and silent at Bill’s Blues on Wednesday, the live music absent.

Bill’s Blues, 1029 Davis St., was closed Tuesday and Wednesday after the city suspended the bar’s liquor license in compliance with the state of Illinois.

Bill Gilmore, who owns the bar, said he owes the state sales taxes and has lost his license as a result. Gilmore said he needs to raise $50,000 within the next week in order to pay off all the necessary expenses to keep the bar running.

Unable to get a bank loan, Gilmore is seeking help from “friends, relatives and drinking buddies,” he told The Daily earlier this week.

This challenge comes after several financial struggles. Two years ago, owners held a special fundraising event to keep the bar open. This past summer, Bill’s Blues had to fight to regain its liquor license after being caught selling alcohol to a minor in a police sting.

While Bill’s Blues is under the threat of closure, another live music venue, Evanston SPACE, 1245 Chicago Ave.,  has experienced growth, not decline, since opening in April 2008, said general manager Jake Samuels. He said ticketed events make it easier to draw upon specific fan bases and that he would be sorry to see Bill’s Blues go.

“What Bill has done has been great and it’s a tough go,” Samuels said. “We certainly don’t like the idea of being the only musical option in Evanston.”

Gilmore, along with several musicians he books, said establishments like Bill’s Blues are becoming a rarity.

If Bill’s Blues does remain open, it will likely expand its horizons to include more indie rock and hip-hop acts in the hopes of attracting additional clientele, Gilmore said. High-quality music is a priority, he said, not dance parties.

“We’re not the Keg,” he said.

Gilmore said the recession of 2008 and 2009 caused a decrease in business as people went out less in order to save money. He said the bar has attracted most of its

Northwestern clientele through events organized by NU students.

Weinberg senior Cameron Henderson said he helped organize a fundraising event for STITCH Magazine and Northwestern Art Review at the bar.

“We chose Bill’s Blues because they always have great live music and they tend to be friendly to students,” he said.

Local musicians who play at Bill’s Blues said the bar offers a unique experience to Evanston that is getting harder to find.

“Bill’s Blues is everything that’s right about Evanston,” said Tom Crivellone, who plays at the bar’s weekly blues jam. “It’s an old-fashioned kind of blues bar, but it’s got modern touches and modern people.”

Mike Finnerty, who plays saxophone every week at Bill’s Blues, said the bar’s struggle is a result of the recession, as well as a long-term decline for music venues of its kind. Live music, he said, is becoming a less prominent part of culture.

“Our mass media doesn’t feature any live music at all,” he said. “You won’t see somebody playing jazz on American TV. The average American’s music consumption is the equivalent of eating McDonald’s five nights a week and Burger King the other two, but paying filet mignon prices.”

Finnerty said Bill’s Blues cultural value merits the city cutting the venue some slack.

Finnerty said he would like to see more students coming to play at the bar in the future.
“You can’t be a jazz musician just going to school,” he said. “You have to go out to play.”
He said closing the bar would eliminate one of a dwindling number of jazz clubs in the area.

“I play pretty much vintage jazz, and there’s hardly any outlet for the jazz I play,” Finnerty said. “It’s destroying the only living habitat of an endangered species.”
 

a.elkin@u.northwestern.edu

Comments

7 comments
Bill West
Sun Nov 15 2009 11:54
As a founder and partner in Bill' Blues, as well as Elsewhere on Lincoln and Elsewhere on Clark, I can only say Amen to 99% of the above. the bar was on a downhill spiral from the very beginning when Bill and his ex-wife, Debbie, refused to accept the free help of friends and investors, most importantly with the bookkeeping. It was THEIR venue and now......you reap what you sow. It is a shame.
Your name
Fri Nov 13 2009 13:14
I’ve been a Tuesday night blues jammer at Bill’s Blues for nearly a year and the loss of this venue after 7 years is a huge entertainment and cultural loss to both Evanston and all of Chicago. I’m aware of no other venue in the Chicago area that offered live performance opportunities for so many budding musicians in so many genres.

While I applaud Bill (aka William Gilmore) for having kept this multifaceted cultural entertainment resource a viable concern for so long, I’d like to offer a little constructive criticism:

I haven’t been acquainted with that many club owners, but the ones I have known tend to be extroverts, a constant presence in the club that conveys a dedication to pleasing both their customers and performing talent. For small clubs especially, I’ve often seen the owner busy filling in for hired staff as needed, whether it’s spotting the bar, bussing tables, or cleaning the bathrooms. Sadly, during my limited experience with Bill’s Blues I’ve seen none of this from Mr. Gilmore. If he appreciates his patrons and performers (and I’m sure he does), he doesn’t communicate it. To the contrary, for the 40 weeks or so I’ve observed Mr. Gilmore at work, his most obvious priority has been watching movies on DVD on the HD television hanging over the bar. On one occasion I witnessed a long-time Chicago blues celebrity walk into Bill’s and introduce himself to Mr. Gilmore, but Mr. Gilmore barely acknowledged him, apparently far too adsorbed in watching his movie of the evening. On another occasion Mr. Gilmore delayed a scheduled live performance for nearly an hour while he—alone—finished watching an especially long movie. No explanation, no apology from Mr. Gilmore.

Mr. Gilmore, I realize that public relations may not be your strong point, but that’s no excuse for such public displays of outright disregard for your patrons and performers. Bill's Blues deserved better. And in a message for all music club owners: if you have a television near the main stage, please turn it off while the live music is playing. Nobody should have to suffer through FoxNews while enjoying some of Chicago’s best live talent.

gail
Sun Nov 8 2009 21:49
I agree with Finnerty’s statement; “You can’t be a jazz musician just going to school,” he said. “You have to go out to play.”

This recession is going to hurt more than the people here and now, it will stifle future musicians. To bad the small business men and woman aren’t getting any of that bail out money being tossed around.

Concrete Cowboy
Fri Nov 6 2009 00:24
Oh sure...Poob.
How dare I suggest that a business owner take reponsibility for their own decisions,
instead of blaming everybody else.
I notice how fast you are to call names and at the same time fail to elaborate on YOUR non-specific statement.
And you have the audacity to call ME a moron ?
That takes as much back-bone as a fish.
musicman
Thu Nov 5 2009 13:12
I'd rather see money raised for the MUSICIANS instead of Bill. He is obviously inept corrupt or both, but I can't see bailing out some guy who doesn't pay his taxes and bills and doesn't even pay the musicians a decent wage. If he's like most club owners like this, the musicians are working for the door or are playing for tips. BILL gets free entertainment! He's what musicians call a CLUB OWNER. That title is not complimentary in the music world. I think musicians who are putting faith in this guy Bill Glimore to save the music industry are putting their faith in the wrong place. That is just my opinion.
poob
Thu Nov 5 2009 12:28
What an absolute idiotic statement to make, Concrete Cowboy!! Obviously, you either don't like live music or are a moron.
Concrete Cowboy
Thu Nov 5 2009 12:01
There are a couple of words that could be applied here.
Personal responsability. Where is it ? Yes, of course, it's the resession, it's people not going out as
much. Of course, it has nothing to do with a stage next to a window that acts as an amplifier that manufactures
noise complaints.
Yeah...that curtain helps a whole bunch. Clubs that card patrons at the door don't get caught in I.D. stings by the local police very much.
Bill Gilmore has been involved in a number of Blues clubs in recent years and has always failed or been asked to leave by his partners, so this is nothing new. ( The closing not a matter of if, but when.)
Perhaps Evenston will be fortunate enough next time it gives licence to a live music venue that the next owners
will make solid business decisions and take some "personal responsability" for their decisions,
instead of blaming everything else under the sun on God's green earth.






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