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Authors:
Historic Era:
Historic Theme:
Subject:
| Volume , Issue
Forty-five years ago today, a scrappy-looking character with wild, kinky hair, tattered work clothes, and a round baby face that looked even younger than his 19 years, took the stage at Gerde’s Folk City, a popular bar at 11 West 4th Street, just two blocks from Washington Square, in the heart of Greenwich Village. It was a seminal moment in music history.
Only months before, Gerde’s had been a small Italian restaurant. The neighborhood, once a mainstay of New York’s Italian community, was changing fast as young students, artists, and musicians steadily replaced—some would say displaced—the aging immigrants whose small, tidy apartments and nearly identical eateries lined the narrow streets of the Village.
Gerde’s owner, Mike Porco, had been struggling to make the place pay, but luckily for him, and for posterity, he was a quick study. He had no great liking for folk music, but he noticed that a lot of the young people gravitating to the Village loved it. In an era of seeming suburban bliss and consumer conformity, they were hungering for an ever-elusive sense of authenticity, and in some vague way they imagined that souped-up, harmonized versions of traditional music—slave spirituals, work songs, English ballads, Irish melodies—might be the answer.
So Porco struck a deal with Izzy Young, the proprietor of the Folklore Center, a local clearing house for sheet music, records, and subculture gossip. Young would supply the talent, and Porco would supply the venue. With its red-checkered tablecloths and maroon walls, Gerde’s, a small storefront roughly 35 feet across and 50 feet deep, soon became the main gathering place of America’s rising folk elite.
By the time Bob Dylan took the stage to play his first paid act as a folk soloist, the club had become one of America’s leading stages for a new urban music scene that was quickly gaining popularity among well-heeled college and city crowds. Carolyn Hester, Cynthia Gooding, Ed McCurdy, and Peter, Paul and Mary all played there regularly. So did the Weavers, the first of the great folk-revival groups.
Bob Dylan wasn’t inaugurating a new cultural movement. He was trying desperately to climb aboard a fast-moving train. Born Robert Zimmerman, he was a native of Hibbing, Minnesota, a working-class town in the heart of the state’s famous Iron Range. His childhood was entirely conventional. Raised in a tan, two-story stucco house, he had grown up in a close-knit Jewish family. His father, Abraham Zimmerman, sold furniture and appliances; his mother, Beatty, was a clerk at Feldman’s Department Store. A solitary child, Dylan spent his early years writing and reading poetry and crooning along to radio broadcasts of his idol, Hank Williams. When rock ’n’ roll became the rage, he traded Williams for Elvis. When he discovered his first Woody Guthrie albums—probably just before or during his brief stint at the University of Minnesota—he turned to folk music.
A master at self-reinvention, Dylan would later concoct implausible stories about his journey to stardom. He told one interviewer that he had been a traveling circus