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HistoryYou are in: Jersey > My Island > History > Rock and roll hits the rock ![]() Behans nightclub Rock and roll hits the rockBy James McLachlan The Pav becomes Behans and rock and roll was the name of the game. BBC Jersey spoke to the club's manager, Chris Sparkes. By the late 60s, the West Park Pavilion had moved on from its days as a big band nightclub and become a cabaret venue. The Pav of the 50s could count royalty and film stars as regular guests, but the subsequent decade saw the place badly needing needed a new direction. This new direction arrived in the dynamic form of Joyce and Hughie Behan, who bought the Pav in 1971. Re-launched as Behans, it now featured an automated stage, which rose up from the dancefloor and a world class sound system. Top ActsManager and DJ Chris Sparkes, who was there from the beginning, believes the Behans were the main reason for the success. ![]() Behans in its heyday Chris said: “Jersey was full to the gunnels with holiday makers and seasonal workers with cash on the hip, looking for a good time. So it was the right place at the right time. "However, it was the Behans who made it what it was. There were so dynamic and astute.” The Behan era saw some the best live acts in the world coming to play in Jersey. “We played anyone who was anyone. The bottom line was every week there was always an absolutely superb line-up. "It was more a case of who didn’t play there rather than who did,” Chris explained. The list of acts that played at Behans reads like a who’s who of musical talent from the 70s. Slade, Suzi Quattro and the Drifters are just some of the many that came. Even rock behemoths Led Zepplin gave an impromptu performance, still the source of interest for many a budding rock historian. ![]() Leo Sayer poses outsides Behans
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