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When Andy Warhol Discovered the Velvet Underground at Café Bizarre: 'A Dump'
Rick Allmen opened the Café Bizarre in 1957, one of the first Beat Generation clubs in Greenwich Village. Odetta was the opening night headliner. Jazz acts followed and Jack Kerouac and Allen Ginsberg had readings there. Larry Love, the Singing Canary, landed his first paid engagement at the Bizarre in 1962. Love later changed his name to Tiny Tim.

edgarstreetbooks
2 days ago1 min read


Nils Lofgren of Bruce Springsteen’s E Street Band on His ‘Holy Grail Moment’ at Fillmore East
Nils Lofgren is best known for his solo work as a singer-songwriter and as a guitarist in Bruce Springsteen’s E Street Band and Neil Young’s band, Crazy Horse. But in 1968, Lofgren was 17, a struggling musician who’d left Walter Johnson High School in Bethesda, MD, and headed for New York City.

edgarstreetbooks
Feb 233 min read


Remembering the Anderson Theater, NYC’s Forgotten Rock Hall
The Anderson Theater at 66 Second Avenue was named after theatrical agent Phyllis Anderson. The hall opened in 1957 and presented Yiddish plays through the 1960s. In 1968 Crawdaddy magazine sponsored a series of rock shows that featured the Yardbirds, Traffic, Procol Harum, Moby Grape, and Big Brother & the Holding Company with Janis Joplin.

edgarstreetbooks
Feb 142 min read


Richard Lloyd of Television on the Art of Sneaking Backstage at Fillmore East
As a budding musician, Richard Lloyd, the former guitarist, singer, and songwriter of the band Television attended many Fillmore East shows without buying a ticket. In this excerpt from the book Fillmore East: The Venue That Changed Rock Music Forever, Lloyd recalls his ploys to get the best seat in the house: backstage at Fillmore East.

edgarstreetbooks
Feb 102 min read


Mary Weiss of the Shangri-Las: 'I Put a Lot of My Own Pain' Into 'Leader of the Pack'
The Shangri-Las have been cited as an influence on 1970s punk rockers Blondie and the New York Dolls. The group set itself apart from the girl groups of the 1960s by wearing skin-tight slacks and spike-heeled leather boots to promote a tough-girl image. Their first hit, “(Remember) Walking in the Sand,” reached the Top 5 in 1964. Its follow-up, “Leader of the Pack,” was a №1 hit later that year.

edgarstreetbooks
Feb 92 min read


Eddie Brigati of the Rascals on His Career and Solo Debut: Interview
“Some people may not realize it but the Rascals were the first rock band in the world … in the center of the universe, New Jersey, the Rascals were the first band.” – Steven Van Zandt, 1997 Induction of the Rascals into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame

edgarstreetbooks
Feb 710 min read

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