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Stop 11 of 13

Oklahoma Music Hall of Fame

Oklahoma Music Hall of Fame

On your left, look for the tan stone Art Deco building with two chunky corner towers, tall arched windows, and big carved letters across the front reading “TULSA UNION DEPOT.”

This place started life as a transportation workhorse, not a music shrine. The old Tulsa Union Depot was built for the steady rhythm of arrivals and departures-people hustling under that long canopy, porters rolling trunks, the whole city moving past the arched windows. Today it goes by a more fitting nickname: the Jazz Depot, home to the Oklahoma Jazz Hall of Fame.

The Hall of Fame is a nonprofit with a simple mission and big ears: honor Oklahoma’s jazz, blues, and gospel musicians. Inside, it’s part performance venue, part museum-photos, stories, and artifacts that connect names on plaques to real lives and real gigs. You’ll see tributes to players like Chet Baker, Charlie Christian, Don Cherry, Earl Bostic, Barney Kessel, and Jimmy Rushing-artists who helped prove that Oklahoma didn’t just borrow American music; it helped write it.

Every year there’s an induction ceremony-these days held in November-and more than a hundred musicians and groups have been recognized so far. The very first inductee was Zelia N. Breaux, a music educator who shaped generations of talent. And in 1999, they added the Jay McShann Lifetime Achievement Award, tipping the hat to people who spent a whole lifetime enriching the sound-names like Dave Brubeck, Lou Donaldson, Ramsey Lewis, Nat King Cole, George Duke, and Lalo Schifrin.

Not every chapter is smooth. In 2004, a county initiative set aside four million dollars-about six and a half million in today’s money-to buy and renovate this depot, and it officially reopened in 2007. Then came hard times: by late 2020, a lawsuit over unpaid costs, bankruptcy in 2021, and finally a new nonprofit buyer with plans, funding, and renovations to keep the music alive.

Ready for Oneok Field? Just walk southwest for about 13 minutes.

arrow_back Back to Tulsa Audio Tour: Art Deco Beats in the Downtown Canyon
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