|
It was a call from Greenwich Village folk musician Dave Van Ronk's wife to Lena that got a young Bob Dylan his first of two performances at the Saratoga coffeehouse in June 1961. That first gig didn't go so well. As the story goes, when Dylan performed, few in the audience were paying attention. At one point, Bill Spencer took the stage to chastise the audience. It didn't work. Everyone returned to their conversations as Dylan resumed singing. "He was quite upset," Van Ronk, who died in 2002, recalled in a 1989 interview with The Associated Press. After her husband left in the early '60s, Lena took on every aspect of running a music venue. She booked the acts, introduced them to the audience, handled publicity, paid the bills, even made the Italian pastries and other desserts served by the all-volunteer staff. "The Caffe is my whole existence, the be-all and end-all of my life," she told the AP in an interview a few months before her death. "My life began almost in 1960." There were plenty of lean times when interest in folk music waned, but she hung on, never once closing the cafe's doors despite the strain it placed on her personal finances. Things got so bad in the late 1980s that she moved into a back room at the coffeehouse after Saratoga's rents rose beyond her means. Lena died at 66 in October 1989, several weeks after falling down the stairs at her coffeehouse. Although so many now-well-known performers had graced her stage, she was emphatic about never claiming to have "discovered" a particular musician. Instead, she took pride in providing a welcoming place for young musicians to hone their craft before a live audience. "I don't credit myself with discovering any talent," Lena told the AP in 1989. "I credit myself with providing a place to perform early in a career." Moss said there's still a need for a place like Lena's, especially in the era of music downloads, iPods and social networking. "In an age where everybody's busy poking each other on Facebook, the idea that you can sit in a small room where amplification is almost not needed and you can almost converse with the artist and sing along, that's a rare thing in the arts," Moss said. ___ On the Net:
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
News | Sports | Business | Rural Review | Teaching & Learning | Home and Family | Tourism | Obituaries
Community |
Perspectives
|
Law & Courts |
Leisure Time
|
Spiritual Life |
Health & Fitness |
Teen Scene
Calendar
|
Letters to the Editor