Richard Barone is an acclaimed recording artist, performer, producer, and author. Since pioneering the indie rock scene in Hoboken, NJ, as frontman of The Bongos and then helping to launch the chamber pop movement with his solo debut cool blue halo, Barone has produced countless studio recordings and worked with artists in every musical genre. His list of collaborators includes Tony Visconti, Beach Boy Al Jardine, Sean Lennon, Dion, Donovan, Moby, the late Lou Reed, and folk legend Pete Seeger. He has scored shows and staged all-star concert events at such venues as Carnegie Hall, the Hollywood Bowl, and New York's Central Park. His memoir, Frontman: Surviving the Rock Star Myth, was published by Backbeat Books. His latest album, Sorrows & Promises, is a celebration of the early 1960s music scene in Greenwich Village NYC, where Barone lives. He is affiliated with the Clive Davis Institute of Recorded Music at NYU and The New School of Jazz & Contemporary Music, serves on the Board of Governors of The Recording Academy (GRAMMYs), and on the Board of Advisors of Anthology Film Archives.
Richard Barone is an acclaimed recording artist, performer, producer, and author. Since pioneering the indie rock scene in Hoboken, NJ, as frontman of The Bongos and then helping to launch the chamber pop movement with his solo debut cool blue halo, Barone has produced countless studio recordings and worked with artists in every musical genre. His list of collaborators includes Tony Visconti, Beach Boy Al Jardine, Sean Lennon, Dion, Donovan, Moby, the late Lou Reed, and folk legend Pete Seeger. He has scored shows and staged all-star concert events at such venues as Carnegie Hall, the Hollywood Bowl, and New York's Central Park. His memoir, Frontman: Surviving the Rock Star Myth, was published by Backbeat Books. His latest album, Sorrows & Promises, is a celebration of the early 1960s music scene in Greenwich Village NYC, where Barone lives. He is affiliated with the Clive Davis Institute of Recorded Music at NYU and The New School of Jazz & Contemporary Music, serves on the Board of Governors of The Recording Academy (GRAMMYs), and on the Board of Advisors of Anthology Film Archives.
Richard Barone is an acclaimed recording artist, performer, producer, and author. Since pioneering the indie rock scene in Hoboken, NJ, as frontman of The Bongos and then helping to launch the chamber pop movement with his solo debut cool blue halo, Barone has produced countless studio recordings and worked with artists in every musical genre. His list of collaborators includes Tony Visconti, Beach Boy Al Jardine, Sean Lennon, Dion, Donovan, Moby, the late Lou Reed, and folk legend Pete Seeger. He has scored shows and staged all-star concert events at such venues as Carnegie Hall, the Hollywood Bowl, and New York's Central Park. His memoir, Frontman: Surviving the Rock Star Myth, was published by Backbeat Books. His latest album, Sorrows & Promises, is a celebration of the early 1960s music scene in Greenwich Village NYC, where Barone lives.
He is affiliated with the Clive Davis Institute of Recorded Music at NYU and The New School of Jazz & Contemporary Music, serves on the Board of Governors of The Recording Academy (GRAMMYs), and on the Board of Advisors of Anthology Film Archives.
"A lively, irresistible read--and a surprising one, too. Richard is
not following a literary formula here. He's inventing one."
--Anthony DeCurtis, celebrated lecturer and author, contributing
editor at Rolling Stone magazine.
"Greenwich Village is not only the stomping ground of songwriter
Richard Barone but also his creative muse. His account Music +
Revolution on the Village folk scene in the 1960s is a lovely
companion to his album Sorrows and Promises, providing us sketches
of memorable characters and giving us insight into the sights and
sounds of the famed Manhattan neighborhood." --Stephen Petrus,
co-author of Folk City: New York and the American Folk Music
Revival
As you wander through Richard Barone's excellent telling of the
astounding events that took place in Greenwich Village from 1960 to
1969, remember that each folk and blues singer you meet, the
unknown and the well-known, all fell under the spell of a very
small community, which still retains to this day its village
dimensions. Breathe in the atmosphere of where it all
began.--Donovan
During the 1960s folk scene in Greenwich Village, we propelled a
renaissance in civil rights, art, and music. This vibrant narrative
evokes that time, painting a vivid landscape for us and generations
of readers to come.--Carolyn Hester
NetGalley Review: 4 starsLast updated on 25 Aug 2022"My thanks to
both NetGalley and the publisher Rowman & Litttlefield- Backbeat
for a copy of this history on both a scene and a state of mind. Bob
Dylan in Tangled Up In Blue sang "There was music in the cafes at
night and revolution in the air". Not being much of a Dylanologist
even at the time I assumed and still do think that he was singing
about Greenwich Village in New York City. My father always talked
about buying and records, and who knows what else. Most music
biographies always have a chapter about the Village, either seeing
shows or moving into the area. The clubs and venues where many
early troubadours played are still known, even if most of them are
now clothing stores or a Starbucks. It always seemed magical a
nexus of both talent, ideas, hopes, dreams, and crushing reality.
Richard Barone, musician, producer, professor, author and historian
has in Music + Revolution: Greenwich Village in the 1960s, written
a history of the place, a time, and a vision, complete with
photos.The book begins with a brief history of the area starting
about the time of the Native Americans and their real estate
dealings with Europeans to the early 1950's discussing the history
and big events in the area. Barone also covers the rise of Folk and
early Americana music with discussions about Lead Belly, Allan
Lomax, Pete Seeger and Woody Guthrie. The Clancy Brothers are also
discussed, which coming from an Irish household whose music was
played constantly I was surprised by their involvement in the folk
movement. We then enter the sixties where the book really goes
in-depth, breaking the decade down year by in studying the players,
musicians, artists, writers even filmmakers who moved into the
area, shared rooms, bands, significant others and more. Buddy Holly
was a resident, which surprised me quite a bit, never knowing that
he had moved from Texas. Richard Barone has a very good way with
words and the ideas behind them, living in the Village and working
as a performer might give him insight on creative people and how
they work and think. There are a lot of names and works, music,
books, and poems, but Barone never loses the narrative, nor drones
on about one subject to the expense of another. People are
introduced and reintroduced when needed. Barone also has a nice way
of writing about the live performances, the descriptions seem to
capture moments of performance that are rare in a lot of books
about music. The research and work that went into this book must
have been immense, and it shows in the writing which is very
informative and never dull.A book about scene that I thought was
pretty played out by all the many, many other books on music that
have come before. However I enjoyed being proved wrong. There is a
lot that is new, and the book has a very interesting feel to it.
Recommended for music fans of course, or for people interested in a
New York that seems so far away. Also for people who are interested
in the creative arts, stories of artists being successful on their
own terms among people who share their vision are always
inspiring."--Dan O'Leary, bookseller
NetGalley Review: 5 starsLast updated on 08 Jul 2022"Greenwich
Village from 1960 to 1969 was a major epicenter of the cultural
revolution in America--the East Coast counterpart to Haight-Ashbury
and North Beach in San Francisco, and the Sunset Strip in Los
Angeles. In the Village, many innovative changes in art,
literature, fashion, film, and music occurred, and the
reverberations of social and political unrest had direct
impact.With Music + Revolution, Greenwich Village in the 1960s,
Richard Barone captures the Village's revolution in detail, while
delivering one of the first books to specifically document the
music of this eclectic neighborhood during the 1960s. The narrative
is supported by numerous historic photographs from the David Gahr
Archive that beautifully capture the people and places in the
Village and its environs during the '60s and early '70s.After a
short history of the Village from 1600 to 1939, Barone details the
origins of the American folk revival of the 1950s, chronicling the
influence of Woody Guthrie, Lead Belly, and Pete Seeger on the
revival's germination in the Village with Carolyn Hester, Dave Von
Ronk, Bob Gibson, and other forerunners of the movement.Beginning
with 1960, Barone delineates the year-by-year evolution of the
Village's music and culture and the groundbreaking folk artists who
populated its turn-of-the-century tenements. He describes their
unique orientation to the Village, the relationships that inspired
creativity, and the coffeehouses, streets, and parks where they
played, cultivated their craft, and contemplated protests--the
Gaslight Cafe, the Night Owl Cafe, the Cafe Bizarre, and Gerde's
Folk City, to name a few.From Bob Dylan, Tim Hardin, and Richie
Havens to Alan Ginsberg, Jack Kerouac, and William S.
Burroughs--hundreds of musicians, poets, artists, writers, and
activists are profiled with special attention to their lifestyle
and character. Barone includes enlightening revelations about many
of his subjects, including Buddy Holly, who despite his renown as a
resident of Lubbock, Texas, moved to Greenwich Village in October
1958, making his final recordings--including "Peggy Sue Got
Married"--on a reel-to-reel tape recorder in his Village apartment
prior to his death on February 3, 1959.Coverage of the innumerable
post-acoustic, electric folk and rock artists who permeated Village
venues by 1965 includes profiles of the Lovin' Spoonful, the Blues
Project, the Velvet Underground, and Jimi Hendrix (performing at
Cafe Wha? as Jimmy James), and acknowledgment of such landmark
bands as the Blues Magoos, the Magicians, and the Fugs.Richard
Barone offers impressive credentials for a document of the
Village's revolution in the '60s: a recording artist, performer,
producer, professor, and author, he has worked with many luminaries
of folk music and the Village, including Donovan, Lou Reed, and
Pete Seeger. For the past thirty years, Barone has lived in
Greenwich Village with a dedication to absorbing its historic
energies, which remain virtually unchanged ... and for good reason:
in 1969, over 2,200 buildings and 100 blocks in Greenwich Village
were declared a historic district, and it remains the oldest and
largest historic district in New York City."--Walter Roland Moore,
consumer reviewer
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