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Nestled on the corner of South First and San Carlos, at the edge of San Jose’s SoFA arts district, is a fairly ordinary office building that transforms when the clock strikes five. Entering the office on weekdays, you will see the staples of a nonprofit workplace: overhead fluorescent lighting, cubicles, filing cabinets, and a water cooler. Any time after 5pm, the hum of the water cooler is replaced with sound checks, the fluorescent lights are replaced with projections and mood lighting, and the front desk is converted into a bar. This office-turned jazz-lounge is the San Jose Jazz (SJZ) Break Room, a 100-person music venue designed and operated by San Jose Jazz that was established in 2020 through a grant from the Knight Foundation.

Early COVID-era live streams from SJZ Break Room featured small, socially distanced crowds wearing masks. Today, it is common to be a full house, but the team has continued producing live streams available on the San Jose Jazz YouTube page and projected during the show on the 20foot windows facing San Carlos Street. The brainchild of Special Projects Manager Scott Fulton, SJZ Break Room was designed as an intimate setting for audiences to enjoy a variety of jazz-adjacent performances by emerging and established musicians. Recalling his initial vision for the space, Fulton shares, “San Jose Jazz was a 30-year-old organization that never had its own venue.”

“I know how hard it is to pursue music; I’ve been on the front lines of that, so any little thing that I can do to help young people not give up on that dream and to pursue it with every fiber in their bodies is really exciting, humbling, and my favorite thing to do.”

Born and raised in the South Bay, Scott Fulton has long been interested in music. He recalls seeing a video of Les Claypool, bassist for Bay Area progressive rock group Primus performing at Woodstock ’94, launching his practice as a bass player. Later in life, Fulton pursued music industry studies at California State University, Northridge, while playing bass in a cover band called Seduction and an original project called Balance and the Traveling Sounds. He recalls, “My main source of income was the two bands, but I also had really crappy jobs to just get the rent paid. Balance and the Traveling Sounds’ best and worst year was 2013. We played at the Java Jazz Fest in Indonesia, were paid for our recording sessions, and then the band completely capitulated. It was serendipitous, though, because my wife got into grad school at San Jose State University right around that time. I was ready to be out of there, but I fondly remember that time.”

After returning to San Jose, Fulton retired from performing. He took a job with San Jose Jazz, managing transportation logistics for Summer Fest and working with the youth program. He later took on initiatives such as the San Jose Jazz Boombox truck, a mobile stage providing pop-up concerts. After experiencing the crowded and cutthroat music scene in Los Angeles, Fulton recalls, “Getting back to San Jose felt like a breath of fresh air because this arts community wants to prop each other up.”

Fulton pitched the initial layout, sound, and lighting design concepts for SJZ Break Room. His dream of designing a venue stems back to his youth. “As a teenager, I was a projectionist for landmark theaters. I always thought of movie theaters as perfect music venues. I would draw pictures of my ideal venue and include technical elements.” The intimate design of the space, including the absence of a stage, was inspired by Fulton’s time as a musician. “My favorite gigs to play were always house parties. They felt loose, like people could express themselves freely. That was a big part of why there’s no stage, no barriers. You feel like a part of the show when there’s no stage.”

When asked about the importance of venues, Fulton shares, “I can’t even stress how important they are. There’s so much talent and creativity in the San Jose music scene, but those people leave to go to New York, Los Angeles, or places where there’s greater opportunity, or they give up, and that’s really sad for me to see. That’s a huge reason we wanted our own venue; it’s just a little way to create one more space.”

For 2024, SJZ Break Room has a new mural painted by San Jose’s own Brush House that marks it as a landmark right at the gateway to the SoFA arts district. The venue is also hosting several Summer Fest performances, including acts such as Nikara Warren, Huney Knuckles, Baycoin Beats, Jay Sticks, Nico Segal, and The JuJu Exchange. On his time with San Jose Jazz, Fulton shares, “I just really appreciate that I’ve been given the opportunity to basically live the dream, just the fact that I have this time period in my life where I get to do audio production and raise up the local music scene. I know how hard it is to pursue music; I’ve been on the front lines of that, so any little thing that I can do to help young people not give up on that dream and to pursue it with every fiber in their bodies is really exciting, humbling, and my favorite thing to do.”

Follow San Jose Jazz on the web at sanjosejazz.org and on Instagram at sanjosejazz

Follow SJZ Break Room on Instagram at sjzbreakroom

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