Aarvark Music and Culture: for music in the community | bloginfo( name ); ?>
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North Andover pays tribute to Purple Heart veterans
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THE American folk singer Carolyn Hester was playing the Greenwich Village venue, Gerde’s Folk City, one night in 1961. She introduced a song, Lonesome Tears, by saying it had been taught to her by its author, Buddy Holly. “Before you know it,” she recalls in an interview for the new edition of Uncut magazine, “ somebody in this little hat pulled his chair up to almost beside me. He said, ‘Is that true about Buddy Holly? I just think the world of him. It’s nice to meet you, I’m Bob Dylan’.” Six months later, Dylan hitch-hiked to a club in Boston where she was playing, and talked the manager into letting him open for her. Dylan went on to play harmonica on three of the songs on Hester’s next album.