It's so different than it was. Fenway is completely built up. That area around MIT/Lechmere is all big buildings. If you get to the Seaport district sometime that's unrecognizable, and it was the Big Dig that opened up so much of that to development. It's kinda gross because it was essentially a huge gift to developers, but on the other hand, removing the central artery was important to creating continuity through the urban fabric.motorbike guy wrote: Mon Nov 08, 2021 7:49 am So we found ourselves in Cambridge on Friday night. Mary Chungs was a No Go, as they only have takeout, no dining in. So we ate at the Middle East. Food is not great, but not terrible, as always. Joseph was there. They may have painted the place in the 25 years since I was there, but not much else has changed. I showed my son the upstairs room where I spent many many hours both on stage and in the crowd. During dinner we asked the bartender what shows were on for the evening -- she said both upstairs and downstairs were 18+ Hip Hop shows. My son's ears perked up.
So after we ate, and went and walked around Harvard Sq. a while, we came back to central Sq. I was sort of hoping for the Kristen Hersh gig at TT's (Now called "Sonia") but we wound up at the hip hop show downstairs at the Middle East. It kind of sucked but I think my son loved it.
A lot has changed in Cambridge and Boston. Still awesome, though. Glad to see the Metropolitan Rage Warehouse is still Ire Proof. They named the Brookline Ave bridge next to Fenway Park over the Mass Pike after David Ortiz. the whole Fenway/Brookline Ave/Boylston area is completely different from the run down punk rock shithole it used to be. Queensbury street is, like, nice. Change is the only constant. Now he wants to go to school in Boston. Mission Accomplished.
I saw Thalia Zedek and Chris Brokaw at the Mid East in September, which was the first indoor show since the pandemic. It was really a nice, cathartic experience being back there; I'd forgotten how much time I used to spend there!