Subject: Alice's Restaurant From: Pauline L Date: 15 Mar 06 - 07:54 PM I got an interesting card in the mail. It's an ad for "Arlo Guthrie's Alice's Restaurant Massacree 40th Anniversary Tour." It has a 60s-ish drawing of Arlo with long, gray locks; the famous church in the song; and a muse(?). Has it really been 40 years? I did some research on the Internet and found some interesting things, including the lyrics and the original newspaper article and historical background. I also learned about the Guthrie Center, an interfaith church, community center, social welfare (soup kitchen, etc.) organization, and, of course, music center, housed in the very church referenced in the song.. The beat goes on. Does anyone want to share memories or personal opinions? |
Subject: RE: Alice's Restaurant From: bobad Date: 15 Mar 06 - 07:57 PM 40 years you say. Well I'll be the first to say it here. "What a long, strange trip it's been." |
Subject: RE: Alice's Restaurant From: Nick Date: 15 Mar 06 - 08:36 PM Anybody in the world cover this song in anything approaching it's entirety? Every one sings along when you play the chorus but somehow drift off as you start telling the story. Now what's that about? Saw the film - dumped the garbage - ate the meal etc |
Subject: RE: Alice's Restaurant From: Joe Offer Date: 15 Mar 06 - 08:51 PM When I was in the Berhshires a few years ago, I went to Stockbridge and visited the site of the restaurant, which is no longer there - Alice has retired to the tip of Cape Cod, and I had an acquaintance who spent a vacation at Alice's home. I also went to the church in Housatonic, which was quite hard to find - Arlo had turned the church into a sort of shrine to his guru, an Indian woman named Ma. And I bought a T-shirt with a map of the "garbage trail." It was a fun way to spend a day in a beautiful area. -Joe- |
Subject: RE: Alice's Restaurant From: Anonny Mouse Date: 15 Mar 06 - 09:19 PM There was a fella I knew-back in my yoot-on the same coffee house/folk festival circuits as me and my little ensemble. Anyway, really good guitar and banjo picker. Everyone wanted him in THEIR group because of his musicianship, but he was kinda likin' not being attached. He would sing "Alices Restaurant" from beginning to end...nailed it perfectly. Of course, everyone knew the chorus, so that was the inevitable sing-along. But he did the whole deal...played a Guild D-50 if memory serves--the NJ built Guild...back before they got bought and sold a few times. That was one sweet guitar too; probably Brazilian rosewood |
Subject: RE: Alice's Restaurant From: Pauline L Date: 15 Mar 06 - 09:56 PM I don't know what impresses me more: the garbage trail T-shirt or the Brazilian rosewood guitar. I heard Arlo perform the song about 15 years ago. He said that it was 18 minutes long, the same length as the deleted portion of Richard Nixon's secret tape. He dared to suggest a connection. |
Subject: RE: Alice's Restaurant From: WFDU - Ron Olesko Date: 15 Mar 06 - 10:07 PM The INCIDENT that inspired the song happened 40 Thanksgivings ago. The story-song was not released until 1967. Arlo began the 40th anniversary tour last spring and he is wrapping it up now. He has also recently released a wonderfullive CD recorded on tour in Sydney, Australia. This CD honors Alices Restaraunt with a version ABOUT the song - Arlo sings how he once forgot the words and turned to his kids and they didn't know it. He scolded them for not knowing the words - "I know MY father's songs". Really good. Also, Arlo appeared at the Kerrville Folk Festival last June and the set is available on CD from the Kerrville folk fest, with the complete version of Alices that he is performing on the 40th anniversary tour. |
Subject: RE: Alice's Restaurant From: GUEST,.gargoyle Date: 15 Mar 06 - 11:12 PM Ahhh, through the sweet balmy bliss of northern bud, Arlo retreated into sanctity of the hand-ball-courts to get focused; it was the closest to a "green-room" our dirt-floored "field-house" offered.
He was not anywhere close to the "Gritty Nitty Bert Dan" that had proceeded him the year before.
Sincerely,
Having been identified, vericated, indoctrinated four years before - as a member of "Young Republicans for Berry Goldwater" I was one of the few to slip through the hedge of hemp on the right, for this performance. |
Subject: RE: Alice's Restaurant From: Panny Date: 15 Mar 06 - 11:51 PM I saw him in Battery Park City (New York) this past summer. It was advertised as him performing the entire album; he performed the entire song but not the entire album. But it was a lovely concert, people sitting on the grass while Arlo Guthrie told his stories. And everyone sang along to the encore "Goodnight Irene." Tao Seeger's band opened for him. |
Subject: RE: Alice's Restaurant From: Leadfingers Date: 16 Mar 06 - 07:18 AM I keep wanting to 'do' this as a floor spot in one of my local clubs , but as the average spot is two songs / ten minutes , it might NOT be too well received by the organiser / MC , no matter HOW well the audience join in the chorus . |
Subject: RE: Alice's Restaurant From: WFDU - Ron Olesko Date: 16 Mar 06 - 09:22 AM Panny, I remember the Battery Park show last year, but I do not recall it being advertised that way. That show was actually the kickoff for the tour. It might have been that someone in the park commission misinterpreted the show that they were presenting in a press release. As far as I am aware, Arlo never had any intention of performing the entire album since the anniversary was for the incident which took place in 1965. The album came out in 1967. |
Subject: RE: Alice's Restaurant From: John MacKenzie Date: 16 Mar 06 - 09:27 AM My copy of the LP has a nasty big scratch but it still plays thank goodness. Some song, some guy! Giok |
Subject: RE: Alice's Restaurant From: WFDU - Ron Olesko Date: 16 Mar 06 - 10:00 AM The albums is available on CD - without scratches! :) That also reminded me of something - a few years ago, Arlo re-recorded the entire CD and released it as "Alice's Restaurant - The Massacree Revisited". Perhaps that is where the confusion started that Panny mentioned. |
Subject: RE: Alice's Restaurant From: clueless don Date: 16 Mar 06 - 11:44 AM I never memorized the entire narrative, but certain tag lines have a tendency to pop up in my conversation: off the side of the side road remember Alice?...this is a song about Alice I'm sittin' here on the bench, I'm sittin' here on the Group W bench... shrink...I wanta' kill But the line of Arlo's that I quote most often is from his narrative based on "The Motorcycle Song": I knew it wasn't the *best* song I ever wrote... Don |
Subject: RE: Alice's Restaurant From: jojofolkagogo Date: 16 Mar 06 - 12:11 PM Hello to you all !!! ClueLess - the line that I remember and OFTEN quote is " a set of 8 x 10 colour glossy photographs " !!! and " and they ALL moved away from him !!!" GREAT FAB TERRIFIC wot more can I say? from Jo-Jo jojofolkagogo@yahoo.com |
Subject: RE: Alice's Restaurant From: John MacKenzie Date: 16 Mar 06 - 12:22 PM Father rapers!! father rapers sitting right there on the bench next to me!! That's the line that always makes me laugh loudest. Giok |
Subject: RE: Alice's Restaurant From: Geordie-Peorgie Date: 16 Mar 06 - 01:35 PM Any chance of a 'guest spot' from Officer Obie??? Aah bet (like aall yankee cops) he's purron a few poonds what with aall the doughnuts like! Hey but!! 40 Years!! Wad ye credit it - Aah divvent want a Picle mind!! Gerrup there Man! |
Subject: RE: Alice's Restaurant From: Charlie Baum Date: 16 Mar 06 - 01:49 PM William Obanheim (Officer Obie) passed away on Sept. 11, 1994 at age 69. |
Subject: RE: Alice's Restaurant From: M.Ted Date: 16 Mar 06 - 04:10 PM Arlo wasn't the only artist who used him as a subject. He was also a Norman Rockwell Saturday Evening Post cover-boy. Tribute to Officer Obie |
Subject: RE: Alice's Restaurant From: Pauline L Date: 17 Mar 06 - 03:12 AM I especially like And I started jumpin' up and down, yellin' "KILL! KILL!" and he started jumpin' up and down with me, and we was both jumpin' up and down, yellin', "KILL! KILL! KILL! KILL!" Alice's Restaurant was actually made into a film with Arlo and Officer Obie playing themselves. |
Subject: RE: Alice's Restaurant From: Willie-O Date: 17 Mar 06 - 06:43 AM My daughter is probably the only 19-year-old on the planet who can recite the entire Alice's Restaurant Massacree. First she got obsessed with the movie, then she learned the whole thing and uses chunks of it as a theatre-audition piece. All she needs me for is to play the guitar part! She sure got excited last week when I told her about the 40th ann. tour, which is coming to Kingston Ontario in May. |
Subject: RE: Alice's Restaurant From: John Hernandez Date: 17 Mar 06 - 11:50 AM In addition to the Woody Guthrie Center in Stockbridge, MA, there is the Woody Guthrie Folk Music Museum in Pampa, TX, the annual Woody Guthrie Folk Music Festival (Woodyfest) in Okemah, OK, and the Woody Guthrie Foundation and Archives in New York City. |
Subject: RE: Alice's Restaurant From: Kaleea Date: 17 Mar 06 - 01:18 PM I still don't want a pickle! |
Subject: RE: Alice's Restaurant From: Pauline L Date: 18 Mar 06 - 12:30 AM Willie-O, I'm glad your daughter has good taste in music. I know a lot of people about her age who don't even know who Arlo is. Sad but true. Arlo says that he has chastised his kids for not knowing his songs. After all, he learned his father's songs. The Guthrie Center (not Woodie Guthrie Center) is active in helping those who need help both nationally and locally. It is not centered on Woodie's music. |
Subject: RE: Alice's Restaurant From: katlaughing Date: 24 Nov 09 - 12:23 PM Anyone have a tradition of listening to this song specifically on Thanksgiving Day (USA)? The radio station in WY got us started as they played it each year. It's a fun thing to do. |
Subject: RE: Alice's Restaurant From: Amergin Date: 24 Nov 09 - 12:46 PM Odd i was just thinking about it....there is a video of Arlo playing it at a show in 2005.... |
Subject: RE: Alice's Restaurant From: Wesley S Date: 24 Nov 09 - 01:37 PM I'm pretty sure the NPR station in Dallas still does that Kat. |
Subject: RE: Alice's Restaurant From: PHJim Date: 24 Nov 09 - 07:17 PM We were just having a discussion about the songs which share the Alice's Restaurant chord progression at a rehearsal the other night. A couple of friends have unknowingly used it to compose songs. Robert Johnson used it for They're Red Hot. Washboard Hank uses it for You Can't Tame Wild Women. John Hartford used it for Hey Babe, You Wanna Boogie?. Pink Anderson used it to sing Bring It On Home. I just found a song on Youtube called All I Want For Christmas Is Another Ukulele that uses the same progression. It's even used, with a different bridge, for Jada. |
Subject: RE: Alice's Restaurant From: katlaughing Date: 24 Nov 09 - 07:40 PM What a fun song, PHJim, thanks for mentioning it! All I want for Christmas is another ukulele |
Subject: RE: Alice's Restaurant From: GUEST,Brian Daniels Date: 25 Nov 09 - 06:41 AM The Albany NY public radio network (WAMC Northeast Public Radio) also plays this each Thanksgiving. They play a live version where he adds some verses about the 20 missing minutes of missing Nixon tapes and having been invited to the white house by President Carter discovers that Nixon had left a copy of his the Alices Resturaunt record behind. It's much funnier that it sounds in this web post. |
Subject: RE: Alice's Restaurant From: Charlie Baum Date: 25 Nov 09 - 10:30 AM It was a couple of years ago on Thanksgiving, and Lisa and I were driving up to Maine to visit with her son, and on Thursday, the traffic was very heavy on I-84 starting around Danbury, Connecticut, so we thought we'd take US 7 north to the Mass Pike. We had the radio on listening to public radio, and about the time we were leaving Great Barrington, Mass., they started to play "Alice's Restaurant" on the Albany, NY public radio station. In a few minutes, we were driving into Stockbridge, and we crossed the railroad tracks and followed US 7 another half-mile, and there, on the right, is the site of Alice's Restaurant. We parked in front of Alice's Restaurant and listened to the rest of the song. It's the only time I've listened to "Alice's Restaurant" on Thanksgiving Day parked in front of Alice's Restaurant. When it ended, I asked Lisa if she wanted to continue the tour and go visit the town dump, but we figured it was probably closed on Thanksgiving. --Charlie Baum |
Subject: RE: Alice's Restaurant From: katlaughing Date: 25 Nov 09 - 10:37 AM How fun, Charlie! Brian, that's the version I have on CD, the live one with the extra "verses"...it is great! |
Subject: RE: Alice's Restaurant From: FreddyHeadey Date: 19 Oct 22 - 06:14 AM Alice's Restaurant - BBC radio4 - 2012 Ian McMillan goes in search of the people and places described in Arlo Guthrie's 1960's ballad, Alice's Restaurant and discovers how this eighteen minute song inspired a generation and still plays a unique part in American life today. It's a piece that's had a profound effect on Ian ever since he first heard it as a twelve year old in Barnsley; his first introduction to small town America and the anti-war movement. ,,,Finally Ian's forty year old dream comes true when he meets Alice, now an artist with a gallery in Provincetown on Cape Cod, they talk about what the song has meant to her over the years. https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b01nwp2j |
Subject: RE: Alice's Restaurant From: GUEST,Ray Date: 19 Oct 22 - 10:52 AM We stayed at the “Red Lion” in Stockbridge a couple of years before the plague. The Lion claims to be older than the USA and it’s only 50 yards from what was Alice’s Restaurant. At the time it was still a restaurant, Theresas, but it as closed. As others have said, tye Guthrie Centre was difficult to find and that was also closed! The tonw of Stockbridge also features as a line in the James Taylor song, “Sweet Baby James”. I believe he grew up there. |
Subject: RE: Alice's Restaurant From: GUEST,henryp Date: 19 Oct 22 - 01:57 PM James Taylor seems to have settled comfortably into his house at the edge of a state forest down a long, country road in the town of Washington, Massachusetts. He first came to the Berkshires in 1968 as a twenty-year-old seeking help at Austen Riggs Center in Stockbridge, Massachusetts. It was a troubled time in his life, when he was battling depression and drug addiction, and he’s spoken candidly about it over the years, including a now obligatory shout-out to the place every time he performs at Tanglewood just up the road in Lenox. |
Subject: RE: Alice's Restaurant From: Mark Ross Date: 20 Oct 22 - 11:58 AM I met Arlo in '67 a little before the song became a big hit. Even at that point he was getting a little tired of singing and telling the story every night. I watched him a lot at the Gaslight and there were actually 3 different versions of Alice's Restaurant that I heard, all of them using the chorus, but each one different. The only one I remember was the Alice's Restaraunt Please Tip The Gaslight Waitress Blues, the premise of which was "If you don't tip the waitress, it would mean that you were destroying the capitalist system, and nobody wants to see that happen, do they?" I thought that at the time he was going to need an operation to remove his tongue from the inside of his cheek. Mark Ross |
Subject: RE: Alice's Restaurant From: GUEST,henryp Date: 20 Oct 22 - 01:01 PM "Alice's Restaurant" first became popular on New York City radio station WBAI, where Guthrie performed it in the spring of 1967. The radio station was swamped with listener-requests for the song, and it soon caught on with other disc jockeys. The summer of the same year, Guthrie performed the rambling song at the Newport Folk Festival, and in the fall his hit album, Arlo Guthrie, was released. Guthrie commented to Baggelaar and Milton on the effect of the recording on his exposure as a folk artist: "I didn't change my style very much, but it sure made it possible to work a lot! It also made it possible to entertain a whole new audience, normally middle-of-the-road or country & western.... We started to generate interest among a broader range of folks." bettyloumusic.com "Alice's Restaurant: Back by Popular Demand" tour Oct 2018 - Dec 2019 Folk hero Arlo Guthrie celebrates the 50th anniversary of the film inspired by his signature 18-minute song, “Alice’s Restaurant.” Back in 1967, a 19-year-old Arlo Guthrie released Alice’s Restaurant on LP. The title track became a movie and then a movement, fostering an entire generation’s commitment to social consciousness and activism. For this concert, Guthrie will be joined by longtime collaborators Terry “A La Berry” Hall (drums), Steve Ide (guitar, vocals) and Carol Ide (vocals, percussion), with an opening performance by Arlo’s daughter, singer-songwriter Sarah Lee Guthrie. njpac This event took place on Sep 29 venue: prudential hall, betty wold johnson stage |
Subject: RE: Alice's Restaurant From: MaJoC the Filk Date: 20 Oct 22 - 03:33 PM My personal Alice's Restaurant memory: Many years ago, I happened on the sheet music for it in a music shop. What the publishers got wrong was using "286910 glossy color photos" throughout; it took me years to realise the "9" was a mistranscription of "by". But what they did seriously right was using the music of the chorus, words, staves and all, as a light-grey background to the talking part. |
Subject: RE: Alice's Restaurant From: Stilly River Sage Date: 24 Nov 24 - 11:25 AM We had the sad news this week that Alice Brock, namesake of Guthrie's song, passed away. Alice Brock, who helped inspire Arlo Guthrie’s classic 'Alice's Restaurant,' dies at 83 Born Alice May Pelkey in New York City, Brock was a lifelong rebel who was a member of Students for a Democratic Society among other organizations. Nov. 23, 2024, 1:08 PM CST / Source: The Associated Press This is an Associated Press article. Link to the NBC page may or maynot be durable, so I've picked up the text for this. This one isn't behind a paywall so visiting the link should let people see the images and share easily. |
Subject: RE: Alice's Restaurant From: GUEST,Ray Date: 24 Nov 24 - 02:58 PM We did much the same as Joe Offer did in post #4 and can confirm that the church in Housatonic is a bugger to find. We did eventually but everything was locked up. Anyone wanting to find the original restaurant - which when we were there was called Theresa’s and also closed - should make their way to the Red Lion Hotel in Stockbridge (great apple pancakes for breakfast), head about twenty yards east and you’ll find it at the bottom of the second passageway on the right hand side. |
Subject: RE: Alice's Restaurant From: Sandra in Sydney Date: 24 Nov 24 - 04:10 PM now I have various lines running thru my mind ... of course I no longer have the record, but I might just check it out it on youtube - or maybe the different versions ... |
Subject: RE: Alice's Restaurant From: Stilly River Sage Date: 24 Nov 24 - 06:32 PM I still have the vinyl album. :) |
Subject: RE: Alice's Restaurant From: Mrrzy Date: 24 Nov 24 - 07:52 PM Waiting for Thursday to listen to it... |
Subject: RE: Alice's Restaurant From: Sandra in Sydney Date: 24 Nov 24 - 09:55 PM are you skiting, stilly? |
Subject: RE: Alice's Restaurant From: Mark Ross Date: 26 Nov 24 - 02:12 PM Hung out with Arlo in the Village around the time of his recording the 1st album. I vaguely remember another 2 1/2 versions of this piece, probably because he got bored with doing the same thing night after night. The only one I can recall was "Alice's Restaurant Please Tip The Gaslight Waitress Blues", where if you neglected to tip you would be undermining the capitalist foundations of society, and nobody wanted to see that happen, do you? |
Subject: RE: Alice's Restaurant From: keberoxu Date: 26 Nov 24 - 09:12 PM I don't know who wrote this obituary, but it looks like they enjoyed themselves doing so. Appeared in the Tuesday November 26, 2024 edition of the Berkshire Eagle. ALICE MAY BROCK Alice May Brock, a giant of a human being who touched people all over the world, left this earth on Nov. 21 at the age of 83. After recent years of courageous struggle with ill health, she was finally able to slip away comfortably and peacefully at The Lily House hospice in Wellfleet, MA. Alice was the furthest thing from a statistic, so none here. If you want facts, Google her ... since she's a "famous person". Not by personal choice, and through a bizarre series of circumstances, she became a touchstone and icon for thousands, over multiple generations. There's that amazing song, there's a movie, there are personal stories shared by individuals everywhere. If you knew her, or even just knew about her, you understand what we're talking about. Alice was an artist. In every sense of the word. She consumed life voraciously (just the way she read books) and gave back to countless people with a rush of richness. Her own creative gifts were abundant and remarkable. Countless paintings and drawings, several published books and her famous, whimsical painted rocks, placed by the hundreds all over the globe on beaches and roadways, in museums and on mountain tops. A sublime alchemist, she reveled in creating improbable and magnificent combinations from the most improbable and unlikely sources. She was a legendary cook/chef whose passion was feeding people. She had restaurants, of course, and was the toughest boss imaginable, but those who survived walked away fuller and more confident people. Perhaps her greatest gift was her ability to bring out the very best and the very unexpected in the people and things around her. Her generosity to anyone in need often left her in precarious financial position. Several years ago in her beloved Provincetown, MA, friends ran a GoFundMe for her. This comment on the site says it all: "Years ago Alice gave me a job for which I was completely unqualified. I worked my ass off. She yelled at me all summer long. It was the best job of my life. Here's $25." Alice is survived by her chosen family of friends, many of whom have remained close since the 1960's. So how to honor her? It begs the question: what would Alice do? Ponder something beautiful offered by nature; lose yourself in a painting; listen to some meaningful music; savor a good meal. Or, importantly, just reach out -- as she would say -- to a fellow human 'bean'. Please consider supporting The Lily House in Wellfleet, MA. The people there are angels on earth. |
Subject: RE: Alice's Restaurant From: Stilly River Sage Date: 29 Nov 24 - 02:21 PM That was a wonderful obituary. Thanks! Here is the link to Lily House: https://www.thelilyhouse.org/ Don't know about skiting, Sandra. Just old enough to have lived in the vinyl album generation (the first time around) and held onto my LPs! |
Subject: RE: Alice's Restaurant From: GUEST Date: 30 Nov 24 - 05:39 PM Sometime in the mid 70s Arlo played at Rutgers University in The Barn. The version of Alice's he played was Alice's Restaurant and the Giant Multicolor Rainbow Roach (joint). At least that's what my memory says it was. A good time was had by all. |
Subject: RE: Alice's Restaurant From: Neil D Date: 04 Dec 24 - 05:08 AM My brother took me to see Arlo twice in the early to mid-seventies. First time he was on a bill with Pete Seeger. The second time it was Holy Near, Arlo, Ronnie Gilbert and Pete. They called it the HARP Tour. He didn't play Alice's Restaurant either time. A couple years later a friend and I would hang out in a Steakhouse/Lounge and on Fridays there would be a guy there singing and playing guitar. Since we went every week we got to know him pretty well. and David asked if he knew Alice's Restaurant. He did not and when my friend said he should learn it he said "why don't you learn it. I'll learn the guitar part and you can come next Friday and sing it." David did exactly that and it was the only time in his life he ever performed publicly. Years later I had a much beloved Russell/Shi-Tzu mix named Arlo. I also had a Django, a Marley and, currently, a Bowie. |
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