
In the early 1960s, the businessman Joan Rosselló turned the Brindis bar, located at number 17 in Plaça Reial, into a jazz cava. At the suggestion of critic Javier Coma, he called it Jamboree, a Zulu word adopted by the Scout movement meaning "gathering of tribes." The Jamboree was born to accommodate the sessions of the Jubilée Jazz Club, a pioneering entity in the dissemination of jazz then more daring in Barcelona. From then until 1968, the cava in Plaça Reial managed to put Barcelona on the tour circuit of the great jazz stars. She also became famous among the intellectuals and sailors of the VI Fleet that often docked in Barcelona.
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