
There’s 
  very little that the eyes and ears of Bob Koester have not seen or 
  heard.
 
  You might picture him as the wise old owl that sits high atop a tree, 
  surveying everything surrounding him in all directions.
  And that picture would be pretty accurate.
  Koester’s fingerprints are all over everything related to blues and jazz 
  music and his presence in the genre goes back over six decades.
  Simply put, without Bob Koester’s involvement in making, marketing, 
  promoting and selling recorded music, there’s no telling how the fields 
  of blues and jazz specifically, would have suffered. 
  But suffered they certainly would have.
  Since morphing his hobby of digging on the sounds of big-band jazz and 
  collecting music into a full-time occupation back in the early 1950s, 
  the Blues Hall of Famer, who was born in 1932 in Wichita, Kansas, has 
  been a key component in the efforts to keep blues and jazz music from 
  fading into the background and becoming something strictly for 
  historians to reminisce about.
  In addition to giving birth to Delmark Records, a label that is on the 
  precipice of its 60th anniversary, Koester also breathed life into what 
  has become the world’s largest jazz and blues record store – called the 
  Jazz Record Mart – located at 27 East Illinois, in the thriving 
  metropolis of Chicago, epicenter of the American blues scene.
  It takes plenty of gumption to own and operate a blues record label 
  these days, but with gas hovering around four bucks a gallon, it’s every 
  bit as hard, if not harder, to keep a successful retail operation – one 
  that caters to the entertainment side of things – up and running.
  “Business in the store has been a little off from last year and we’re 
  not quite ready to figure out why, except for the recession and people 
  finally figuring out, maybe, that it’s not going to be over too soon,” 
  Koester said. 
  Not just a recent phenomenon, the painful downward slide of recorded 
  music sales started back a few years ago.
  “It was pretty bad. Downloading has had a serious effect on the record 
  business. Our sales were down 40-odd percent and almost everybody else 
  went out of business (over the past decade),” Koester said. “But we had 
  a real, serious comeback when (mega-retailer) Tower (Records) closed. 
  That was the worst thing that happened to the general market and the 
  best thing that happened to Jazz Record Mart.”
  While other industries can point the finger at the rising cost of 
  everything production-related as the reason for soft sales, for the 
  music biz, it’s basically been all about computers and their widespread 
  dominance of our lives.
  
“We 
  were hurting, even before the recession, so it’s downloading. It’s 
  estimated that something like two percent of all downloads are paid 
  for,” said Koester. “One of the hopes is, there’s been some laws passed 
  in France that have made it – I wouldn’t say impossible – but extremely 
  difficult, to do illegal downloads over there. I’m not sure about the 
  details, but there was a similar bill in Congress and I see where the 
  Republicans were on the side of the record companies and music 
  publishers and the Democrats were on the side of the musicians, 
  songwriters and vocalists. But it came up and Google said it was a 
  violation of Freedom of Speech, so they’ve got to re-write it. I don’t 
  think anything’s going to happen until after the election, which I hope 
  will give us a more united Congress.” 
 
  That change in the way people purchase their music has not only crippled 
  the outlets that sell the music, it’s also had a devastating impact on 
  the companies that make the music, big or small, as well.
  “There’s nobody to talk to at these major labels anymore. Everybody’s 
  either in the ivory tower or they’ve got some shit job in the 
  warehouse,” Koester said. “They’re (major labels) firing all kinds of 
  hip people.”
  Back when just about every town had a record store among its grocery 
  stores, barber shops, restaurants and gas stations, it was easy for a 
  music lover to keep up with the latest sounds on a weekly basis.
  Part of that was due to the ease in which those record shops could be 
  stocked.
  “In those days, there were distributors in about 20 or 24 different 
  cities throughout the country,” said Koester. “There were distributors 
  in Chicago, New York, Boston, Denver and St. Louis … but today there are 
  three distributors in the United States. There’s City Hall in the Bay 
  Area, Select-O-Hits in Memphis and a place called Traditions Alive in 
  Cleveland. There are other accounts that we (Delmark) sell to, but 
  they’re not really doing that much actual business.”
  Delmark and its staff is certainly not ‘anti-computer’ and a big portion 
  of the label’s offerings can be found on sites that specialize in the 
  MP3 format, sites such as iTunes or Amazon.com.
  But that doesn’t mean the label is in a hurry to make downloads 
  available through its own Web site (
www.delmark.com). 
 
  “Well, I don’t know the technical side of it, but I gather it’s not 
  something we’re interested in doing,” Koester said. “We’re on iTunes and 
  through some other people. And there’s one company – we can’t go direct 
  with them, we go through another company – and of course they take a 
  bite out of it. So if somebody pays 99 cents for a track, we get 15 or 
  20 cents, something like that. Of course, the music publisher gets 
  money. I’ve checked out the numbers and once your product is available 
  on download, your sales go down 95 percent.”
  
Back 
  in the hey-day of vinyl, or even 8-tracks, the notion of getting music 
  over a glorified television sitting on top of a desk probably seemed 
  like something straight out of a Buck Rogers sci-fi flick. Those were 
  the days when the sound that poured out of your stereo speakers was 
  warm, inviting and anything but digitally processed. But those days are 
  long gone.
 
  “Well, those days are not totally gone. Fidelity is back. We’ve noticed 
  an increase in LP business, for instance. We’re about to put out Otis 
  Rush’s first Delmark recording on LP – we’re expecting the pressings any 
  day. And we’ll be expanding the catalog at the rate of several albums a 
  year,” Koester said. “Plus, some of our artists want to have LPs and we 
  work out deals were they buy a certain quantity, so it’s feasible for us 
  to issue them. Very often, they’ll buy more than we’ll sell the first 
  year. In terms of the blues catalogs, the classics, and a few of the 
  jazz records – we put out the two Sun Ra’s and Roscoe Mitchell from our 
  back catalog – they do OK, but they don’t sell like the blues. The champ 
  seller, of course, is Hoodoo Man Blues. But the percentage of sales on 
  LPS has gone up, while total sales of CDs have gone down slightly. But 
  getting back to downloads, people still want the liner notes. They’ll 
  illegally download their CDs, but they’ll still buy LPs. Young people 
  will come in the store looking for LPs. They sell very well in the avant 
  garde and modern jazz categories, but they’ve got to be the classics.”
  Some of the major labels have been hesitant to jump back into the 
  production of vinyl after a hiatus that began in earnest back in the 
  80s, and according to Koester, they’re missing the boat.
  “We stock something like 50 or 60 Sun Ra titles available on LP, which 
  is way more of his albums than were in print during his lifetime. But 
  stuff like the Miles Davis Prestige classics and some of the Columbia’s, 
  there’s just so few of them available. The major labels are really 
  missing the market. I mean, it’s a small market, but they’d better get 
  used to a smaller industry. Most of the LPs you’ll see on Columbia or 
  Blue Note were not pressed by the company that owns the masters. There’s 
  an outfit called Scorpio in Pennsylvania and they do probably half the 
  LP titles we sell in the store and possibly more than half the volume. 
  MCA or Universal these days, is goofing by not pressing Muddy Waters and 
  Howlin’ Wolf and so forth.”
  So far, Delmark’s delving into the world of vinyl focuses primarily on 
  the label’s back catalog, while newer works like Toronzo Cannon’s 
  Leaving Mood is not currently available on LP format.
  “Our new products tend not to be available on LP. If an artist wants to 
  buy a bunch of them, then maybe,” Koester said. “An artist is a very 
  important outlet for our records, especially vinyl.”
  Koester was born and raised in the very un-bluesy environs of Wichita, 
  Kansas. But he didn’t let his surroundings dictate or hold back his 
  tastes in music. As a young man he still found a way to be smitten with 
  the sounds of jazz.
  “The KFH (radio station) Ark Valley Boys were one of the early 
  influences because they had a real good stride or ragtime piano player. 
  And of course, that was western swing, which was derived from jazz,” he 
  said. “Back when I was a kid, big bands were still around. I couldn’t go 
  hear them, although I did catch Count Basie, with Jimmy Rushing singing, 
  at the Miller Theatre in Wichita when I was quite young. And that really 
  turned me on to jazz and blues, although I didn’t understand blues. But 
  I still don’t see blues as a separate body. To me, it’s part of the jazz 
  scene. Although some jazz fans don’t like that, because they see blues 
  as too primitive.”
  Koester’s first essential brush with the world of recorded music 
  occurred when his family moved into the house of his deceased 
  grandfather.
  “We moved into this nice, big house on Douglas Avenue and he (Koester’s 
  grandfather) had an Original Dixieland Jazz Band 78 in with all his 
  classical records. And he also had a turntable – a phonograph – so I 
  went out and started buying records,” Koester said. “And I also heard 
  the Eddie Condon jazz show, which had a 13-week run on the blue network 
  and at least for part of that, it was broadcast in Wichita.”
  
Then 
  in the mid 40s, a film called New Orleans, a film that Koester, an avid 
  16-millimeter print collector, now has several copies of in his 
  collection, opened in Wichita.
 
  “It showed at The Palace Theatre, I think, the one across from the 
  Wichita Theatre on Douglas, and one of the shorts they showed was Jammin’ 
  the Blues with Lester Young,” he said. “It was an Academy Award winner 
  done by Norman Granz with Gjon Mili doing the photography. And that 
  really turned me on. I was a jazz fan from then on. I was going to be a 
  movie cameraman at one time. But instead of a film maker that collects 
  records, I became a record maker who collects films.”
  Koester’s film collection currently stands at over 800 features – 
  including the always popular Laurel & Hardy comedies – along with 
  several thousand cartoons. 
  When it became time for Koester to attend college, he ended up in 
  Missouri, at St. Louis University, because his parents insisted he go to 
  a Jesuit college.
  “If I’d have went to (college in) New Orleans or Chicago, I would have 
  been seduced by the music, so I went to St. Louis. But the first group 
  (Windy City Six) I ever recorded played a block off of campus, two 
  blocks from my dorm,” he said. “And I joined the St. Louis Jazz Club and 
  was selling records out of my dorm room through The Record Changer 
  magazine and at the jazz club meetings.”
  Just a little over a year after landing in St. Louis, Koester and fellow 
  jazz club member Ron Fister opened their first retail outlet, a store 
  fittingly called K & F Sales, in a small place they rented for $40 a 
  month.
  K & F quickly outgrew its original location and soon the shop was 
  re-christened as the Blue Note Record Shop after taking over an 
  out-of-business restaurant’s spot.
  However, the partnership between Koester and Fister was also about to 
  dissolve. 
  “He wanted to sell all kinds of pop shit and I didn’t, so we broke up 
  the partnership. I paid him off. That was in 1952, I believe,” said 
  Koester. “At first, I thought it was just going to be selling out of the 
  dorm and at the meetings. I thought it would just be a sideline. Then we 
  opened the store and it just went from there.”
  After his split with Fister, Koester relocated the store to a spot on 
  Delmar and Oliver Streets in St. Louis. Thus, Delmar Records – later 
  changed to Delmark - was born and what had started out as an interest 
  and hobby became all-consuming for young Koester. 
  “Eventually I got so involved with it that I flunked my third year and 
  they (St. Louis University) asked me not to come back,” he said.
  At first, Koester really didn’t know what to do when it really dawned on 
  him that his collegiate days were over.
  “I was very indecisive. I got called up in the draft, but flunked the 
  physical because of an irregular heartbeat. And so I decided that I’d 
  stay with it (selling records). But I didn’t have a hell of a lot of 
  capital,” he said. “I remember my inventory would be about 100 LPs, but 
  of course I’d buy and sell 78s, too, collector’s items. The blues 78s, 
  I’d keep one of each. I had a collection of about three or four thousand 
  blues 78s and several thousand jazz 78s. And I was selling off the jazz 
  78s for capital, because the stuff was coming out on LPs, but I kept the 
  blues stuff. But if I got a new blues 78, it’d go in the pile for a 
  dollar or two bits apiece. Nobody wanted them. That’s why blues records 
  are so valuable today, because so many of them got thrown away.” 
  One of the major pitfalls of owning and operating your own record store 
  is having the ability to let go of a cool piece of music that might fit 
  in well in your own personal collection, when on the other hand, the 
  sale of that item could bring in a bit of much-needed cash.
  So how did Koester separate his collector side from his business side?
  “Well, I usually kept it. If it was something I didn’t already have, I’d 
  keep it,” he said. “When stuff would come out on LP, I’d sell the 
  original.”
  But buying and selling records produced by other record companies was to 
  be only a small part of Koester’s budding enterprise.