Joan Baez fondly looks back on her very brief stint at Boston University, mostly learning that there were so many different ways of failing courses — F’s, zeroes, incompletes etc. But she had an ...
The story of how Club 47 went from humble Cambridge coffeehouse to nationally known folk music mecca is a fascinating one. And yet, it has never been told in such panoramic detail as in the new ...
Club 47, the Cambridge coffeehouse where performers such as Joan Baez and Jim Kweskin's Jug Band got their start, will soon have to close unless it can find some way to pay its $11,000 debt. The club ...
The year is 1966 and you are a young Harvard student. You wander the streets of Cambridge in search of quality music. Where to go? The Nameless Coffee House on Church Street offers free performances ...
Over the past half-century, the epicenter of folk music in Cambridge has had three names (Club 47, Passim, Club Passim) two locations (47 Mt. Auburn St., 47 Palmer St.) and a change of musical styles ...
While a common adage jokes that, “if you remember the 60’s, you weren’t there,” few today, both young and old, recognize the influence of the Cambridge, Massachusetts folk scene on the musical ...
New Documentary Exploring the History of The Cambridge Folk Music Scene From 1958-1968 To Premiere At Boston International Film Fest Features Interviews With Joan Baez, Tom Rush, Taj Mahal, Judy ...