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LJS 3rd Sunday Jam Session

LJS 3rd Sunday Jam Session

Jul 13, 2025

6:30pm – 8:30pm

@ The Café

The LJS hosts their “Third Sunday Jam Session” at The Café in Paristown! Bring your axe and come prepared to hang and shed or just listen with Louisville’s diverse and talented Jazz community.

The House Band will kick off the evening with a few standards, then open things up for all. Piano, drums, bass amp, and small vocal PA provided. Guitarists should bring a small amp and vocalists should bring their own microphone.

No cover charge; suggested 2-drink minimum. Full menu available!


Jam Session Guidelines

A jam is primarily about playing TOGETHER with others and building community with other players, the audience, and the venue. It is more about collaboration, respect, kindness, and generosity than about dazzling others with your amazing chops. This is a vibe free zone.

  1. Buy something! The best way to sustain a jam session (or any gig) is to spend money at the host establishment. Also, TIP THE SERVERS AND STAFF! They can be your best allies and advocates.
  2. If you want to play on the jam, sign up! Everyone who wants to play should put their name, instrument, and the title of a tune they would like to play. Groups will be formed by the session leader. Vocalists should indicate key, tempo, etc. Before playing, vocalists should tell band desired format (intro, ending, scat vocal solo?, etc). Ballads are generally discouraged in jam sessions. For singers, verses are generally not played.
  3. The front line people should discuss tune selection, including key, tempo, style, etc. and be ready to step right up and instruct the rhythm section. Try to avoid playing consecutive tunes in the same tempo, style, or key. Generally, ballads and obscure tunes are to be avoided in a jam session.
  4. For tunes with various sets of common changes or form variations (like a vamp, interlude, or tag), be prepared to clearly and succinctly state what version you wish to play.
  5. Every player plays one tune and then sits down to wait their turn for another tune if others are also waiting.
  6. If you call a tune, you should know the tune without reading. If you are on the bandstand and you don’t know a tune that someone else has called, it’s ok to read it. But in general, playing without charts is strongly encouraged.
  7. Decide in advance who takes the first solo. Don’t stretch out too much (each solo should be 1-2 minutes). Subsequent soloists should base the length of their solos on the first soloist.
  8. Discuss in advance whether you will include a bass solo, drum solo, trading, shout choruses, etc.
  9. When in doubt, underplay. Play less, play softer, listen to others, etc. Serve the music and serve your collaborators.