CLiFF HANLEY
the maryland
Brilliant Corners Jazzwise staggers down memory lane
The Maryland Club, Glasgow (April 2007)
"It's like Sauchiehall Street on a Saturday night in here!" was the cry of many a
Scottish parent as the neighbourhood kids came tumbling unscheduled through the house.
Sauchiehall Street is at the hub of Glasgow's nightlife. From the banks of the River
Clyde, you can walk uptown past the main railway stations and the fancy shops, increasingly
uphill until Sauchiehall Street crosses your path. Head west along that famous thoroughfare
towards Charing Cross -

The Maryland site today
Owned by Bob Gardiner and fronted by Willie Cuthbertson, both now sadly deceased,
the club caught the tail end of the Trad jazz boom with visitors such as Acker Bilk
and his band. The Cool era followed with, for instance, tenorist Jimmy Skidmore who
also appeared with his son Alan, as 'Skid, and Skid's Kid'. The gradual inroads made
by soul music into jazz in the mid-

Local band Sky Cabin in the Maryland cafe
When the Blues came to town around 1967/68, John Mayall's Bluesbreakers and Champion
Jack Dupree were regulars. Moothie (harmonica in Glaswegian) player extraordinaire
Frazer Speirs -
Although the club expanded beyond blues and rock to heavy metal with bands like Uriah Heap, it never lost contact with its jazz roots, always the place for rival musicians to check each other out, and good for making contacts. Pete Brown spotted Jim Mullen here and took him off south to join Piblokto (or more accurately Piblokto!).
The ambience of the club changed with the times, and only messrs Gardiner and Cuthbertson
could have revealed how this miniature Amsterdam flourished in the centre of uptight,
Presbeterian Glasgow -
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