date published:
September 25, 2006

A look at the Hub’s place in rock ’n’ roll
history
by Josh B. Wardrop
Ever since the
Pilgrims landed the Mayflower in Plymouth,
Bostonians have had an association with
rock. However, whereas the Pilgrims would no
doubt have found turning the amps up to 11
entirely too sinful, Boston music lovers
have been embracing the mohawked, the
tattooed, the guitar heroes ever since the
days of Elvis Presley—and in the process,
the Hub has turned out some of the most
enduring rock ’n’ roll acts of all time.
Boston wasn’t at the epicenter of the
early rock ’n’ roll explosions the way
cities like Detroit, New York and Memphis
were, but there were occasional successes
that hailed from the Hub—like
Little Joe Cook,
who scored a Top 30 hit on the Billboard
charts with “Peanuts” in 1957, appeared on
“American Bandstand,” and toured the nation
with acts like B.B. King and Screamin’ Jay
Hawkins. (As recently as this past June, the
83-year-old Cook could still be seen
performing his infectious, danceable soul
music twice a week at Cambridge’s Cantab
Lounge.)
In the 1960s, it was The Fab Four that
gave another Boston act—Barry
and the Remains—their big break.
The group had scored a couple of hit singles
in 1965 and appeared on Ed Sullivan’s
Christmas Show, but their fame reached a new
level when they were picked to open for The
Beatles during a 1966 U.S. tour. The
Remains’ star burned out quickly, though—by
the time their one and only album was
released at the tour’s end, they had already
disbanded.
The late 1960s saw the arrival of
psychedelic sounds and a key Boston music
venue—the Boston Tea Party—which
first opened in 1967. Originally, it was the
stomping grounds of far out and groovy local
bands like The Lost,
The Beacon Street Union
and The Hallucinations
(who featured one member—Peter
Wolf—who’d go on to even greater
success in the next decade). Eventually, the
Tea Party became the place where Boston rock
fans would catch “up-and-coming” out-of-town
acts like Fleetwood Mac, The Velvet
Underground, Led Zeppelin, Rod Stewart, Van
Morrison and many, many others.
By 1970, though, the Tea Party was gone
and the music business was changing. For
many ’60s musicians, the move from peace and
love to the “Me Decade” would be
catastrophic, but the arrival of the ’70s
seemed to usher in the Golden Age of Boston
rock, with the Hub producing a number of
legendary acts during those years.
Peter Wolf joined the band he’s most
associated with—The J.
Geils Band—at the end of the
’60s, and in the ’70s, their high-energy
live shows and blues roots produced big hits
like “Lookin’ For a Love” and “Must Of Got
Lost.” At the same time, five musicians from
New Hampshire and Massachusetts united over
their love of the harmonies of The Beatles
and the lascivious honky-tonk of the Stones.
When their collective influences met with
the frenzied ya-ka-ka-ka-ka! of lead singer
Steven Tyler in a dingy Commonwealth Ave.
apartment, Aerosmith
was born.
More bands followed as the ’70s rolled
on, many achieving huge commercial success.
Groups like The Cars
and The Modern Lovers
were at the vanguard of the New Wave
movement of the late ’70s, while Wellesley
native Billy Squier
hit it big with rock anthems like “The
Stroke” and “Lonely is the Night” and the
MIT-bred arena rock legends
Boston scored the
best-selling debut album ever (a record that
would stand for more than a decade), packing
stadiums worldwide.
There was also a new Ground Zero for live
performance in Boston at that time. Deep
below freaky-funky Kenmore Square, the
Rathskellar (or,
as everyone called it, “The Rat”) was a
dingy subterranean dive bar that would
appeal to the ever-burgeoning punk movement,
and that hosted shows by everyone from
Talking Heads and Tom Petty to Thin Lizzy
and The Ramones. Everybody played there—and
would continue to do so until the club
finally closed its doors in 1997 amid a
movement toward gentrification.
The 1980s are remembered as a shiny,
poppy time for rock music, largely consumed
by artifice and shimmering, synthesized
glamour—but the Boston rock scene couldn’t
have reflected that less. Embracing its
status as a college town more than ever, the
bands that emerged from Boston in the Reagan
years were the precursors of what became
known as “indie rock”—producing songs with
harder edges, thoughtful (if sometimes
impenetrable) lyrics and a healthy degree of
cynicism and disassociation from material
concerns. Acts like The
Pixies, The
Lemonheads,
Aimee Mann’s early band
’til Tuesday,
Mission of Burma,
Dinosaur Jr.,
Buffalo Tom and
Juliana Hatfield
helped establish Boston as a bonafide
birthplace of the “alternative rock” sound.
The big bands that emerged from Boston
during the 1990s were arguably a mixed bag.
During the hair metal days of 1991 and 1992,
the quartet Extreme
had a huge hit with the prom ballad “More
Than Words.” But around the time when grunge
legends Nirvana played their first East
Coast show at Green Street Station in
Jamaica Plain, the stage was set for singer
Kay Hanley and
her group Letters to Cleo,
who offered their upbeat take on indie pop,
and groups like The Mighty
Mighty Bosstones and
Dropkick Murphys
who enjoyed a significantly wider audience
than their predecessors. By the end of the
decade, acts like Godsmack
and Western Massachusetts hitmakers
Staind were able
to benefit from hard rock’s now-solid
footing in popular music.
Over the years, some artists have
practically become “Boston musicians” by
association. Whether it’s
Bonnie Raitt (who, like Van
Morrison, resided in Cambridge for several
years), or James Taylor
(a native North Carolinian, but who settled
here along with some of his musical
siblings), to singers like
John Mayer and
Tracy Chapman (who
attended college here— at Berklee College of
Music and Tufts University, respectively)
Hub music fans haven’t hesitated to bring
them into the family.
And today, the beat goes on—with new
names like blue-collar rockers
Damone, smart and
melodic popsters Guster
and artsy cabaret duo The
Dresden Dolls representing the
latest Boston-area bands to garner
nationwide attention. With new bands popping
up every day, and a continually changing
young fanbase living in the city to support
them, Boston seems likely to keep the music
playing for a long time to come.

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WHO’S ROCKING BOSTON NOW?
For
the folks whose annual concert going
experience begins and ends with a
trough of margaritas in the parking
lot of the annual Jimmy Buffett
concert, the end of summer pretty
much means the end of rock concert
season. However, in Boston, the
arrival of a small nation’s worth of
college students tends to make the
Hub a desirable touring spot for
lots of big names even once the
leaves change.
TWEETER CENTER: The
Tweet’s season officially ends
September 29 with the prog-metal
stylings of Maynard James Keenan and
his band, Tool. But it’s the
penultimate two-night stand
September 26 & 28 by Boston rock
legends Aerosmith (pictured), with
support from onetime drinking
buddies Mötley Crüe, that’s
sure to have local rock fans jumping
back in the saddle again. Refer to
listing.
THE ORPHEUM: The Orpheum
tends to heat up as the weather gets
cooler, and this year is no
exception as it welcomes a host of
varied acts from Jack White’s new
band, The Raconteurs (pictured), on
September 29 to jazzy-pop Brit Jamie Cullum on
September 30 to trip-hop’s
Massive Attack on October 1.
Refer to
listing.
TDBANKNORTH GARDEN:
Longtime Boston music fans still
tell stories about legendary shows
at the old Boston Garden—from
waiting until 1 a.m. for a Rolling
Stones show to start, to James Brown |
taking
the stage less than 24 hours after
the Martin Luther King assassination
in 1968. The new Garden hasn’t
secured such a place in rock history yet, but it does
still draw some of the biggest acts
in the world to Boston, including
the Red Hot Chili Peppers (October
2) and old Slowhand himself, Eric
Clapton (pictured) (October 3 & 4).
Refer to
listing.
AGGANIS
ARENA: The new kid on the block,
this 7,200-seat concert arena at
Boston University brings in
everything from indie pop bands to
rock legends. Most imminently,
however, Agganis welcomes the annual
Mix 98.5 FM MixFest concert on
September 30, featuring Top 40 stars
like Rihanna, James Blunt,
KT Tunstall (pictured) and Natasha Bedingfield, while
October 6 sees
the first Boston visit in many a
moon by old-school metalheads Iron
Maiden. Refer to
listing.
AVALON: On a weekend night, Avalon
becomes the city’s top dance club,
attracting internationally known DJs
and club kids of all denominations.
But it’s also a top venue for buzzworthy indie bands and rising
stars. In the next two weeks, music
lovers can check out shows by Clap
Your Hands Say Yeah (September 26),
Less Than Jake (October 5) and
multi-platinum goth-lite superstars
Evanescence (pictured) (October 7).
Refer to
listing. |
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