The Riverboat Coffeehouse
Written by Nicholas Jennings    PDF Print E-mail

Tags: 1960s | 2010 | Bernie Fiedler | Canadian music | Dan Hill | Features | Gordon Lightfoot | history | John Prine | Joni Mitchell | Murray McLauchlan | Neil Young | Phil Ochs | Riverboat Coffeehouse | Sonny Terry and Brownie McGee | Steve Goodman | Tom Rush | Yorkville

The Riverboat Coffeehouse

Neil Young - RiverboatDuring the 1960s Yorkville was a cultural hotspot, the Canadian equivalent of San Francisco's Haight Ashbury or New York's Greenwich Village. Full of clubs, coffeehouses, experimental art galleries and bohemian boutiques, Yorkville was far more than just a hippie haven. It was a vibrant artistic community of international renown, contained within several city blocks.

By far the most famous of all Yorkville's clubs was the Riverboat coffeehouse, at 134 Yorkville. Owned and operated by Bernie Fiedler, the Riverboat opened in October, 1964 and quickly became part of a prestigious North American circuit that included Detroit's Chess Mate and New York's Bitter End. Situated below street level, the club seated 120 people in red booths amid pine walls and brass portholes. Every seat was in close proximity to the stage, providing an intimate showcase of the top names in popular music, including Howlin' Wolf, Simon & Garfunkel, Sonny Terry & Brownie McGhee, Tim Buckley, Ritchie Havens, Junior Wells, John Prine, Ramblin' Jack Elliott, Arlo Guthrie, Buddy Guy, Kris Kristofferson, John Lee Hooker, Doc Watson, Tim Hardin, Jerry Jeff Walker, Janis Ian, Steve Goodman, Odetta, Seals & Crofts and James Taylor.

Murray McLauchlan - RiverboatThe Riverboat is where the protest folk singing star Phil Ochs wrote his popular ballad "Changes." When Eric Clapton was in Toronto with his band Cream, the Riverboat is where he went, with his hair tied in a bun as a disguise, to hear Tom Rush perform. When actor Jack Nicholson was in town shooting The Last Detail, he snuck in through the Riverboat's backdoor to catch some late-night music. Everyone played the Riverboat except Bob Dylan, although even Dylan was rumored to have sat, incognito, in one of the back booths one night.

Joni Mitchell - RiverboatMost significantly, the Riverboat was home to many of the biggest names in Canadian music, including Gordon Lightfoot, Joni Mitchell, Bruce Cockburn, Murray McLauchlan and Dan Hill. Many of them got their first taste of performing there and wrote songs in the club's tiny rehearsal room, with its graffiti-lined walls and lively acoustics. Lightfoot, who played to four full houses a night in 1965, wrote his song "Steel Rail Blues" there. "For me," Lightfoot once said, "the Riverboat was my first taste of the big time. It indicated that you must be really doing something."

Mitchell, who first performed at the Riverboat in November 1966, wrote "Night in the City," her tribute to the bright lights of Yorkville there. And it was at the Riverboat where she first played her most famous song, "Both Sides Now." Before Neil Young found fame south of the border with Buffalo Springfield, he'd appeared as a fledgling folksinger at one of the Riverboat's "Hoot nights." When he returned to Toronto as a solo star in 1969, he performed for a week at the Riverboat—and later paid tribute to the club in his song "Ambulance Blues," in which he sang "back in those old folkie days, the Riverboat was rockin' in the rain."

With the lowering of the drinking age and the stiff competition from bars offering live entertainment, Bernie Fiedler was forced to close the Riverboat in June 1978. Both Dan Hill and Murray McLauchlan performed at its emotional wake. They, along with the hundreds of music lovers who attended the weeklong finale, said goodbye to a tiny club that had served, in many ways, as the birthplace of Canadian popular song.

Sonny Terry and Brownie McGee - RiverboatGordon Lightfoot - RiverboatYorkville experienced a multimillion dollar makeover in the 1970s. Today, it is home to posh restaurants and expensive boutiques, and serves as a fashionable shopping district to tourists and visiting movie stars. Where the Riverboat once stood is now the west side of the Hazelton, Toronto's most prestigious luxury hotel.

But the Riverboat will not be forgotten. In 2009, Heritage Toronto recognized its significance with an historic plaque marking the site. All of the stars came out for the unveiling, including Dan Hill, Murray McLauchlan and Gordon Lightfoot. Bernie Fiedler, looking out over the large gathering, could not have been happier. The little club he had opened back in 1964 had grown to iconic status and will now be forever remembered as a major cultural landmark.



Add this page to your favorite Social Bookmarking websites
Reddit! Del.icio.us! Mixx! Free and Open Source Software News Google! Live! Facebook! StumbleUpon! TwitThis Joomla Free PHP
 

Reviews

News image

Elvis Presley - Elvis is Back! Legacy Edition

2011 | Administrator | Sunday, 27 February 2011

Presley worried that his stint in the army had ruined his career. But this crucial album, recorded just two weeks after his discharge in March, 1960, put an end to...

News image

R.E.M. - Lifes Rich Pageant

2011 | Administrator | Tuesday, 26 July 2011

Originally issued in 1986, the fourth album by R.E.M. proved a turning point for the college-rock heroes from Athens, Georgia. Producer Don Gehman (John Mellencamp) coaxed vocalist Michael Stipe to...

News image

Snow Patrol - Fallen Empires

2012 | Administrator | Wednesday, 11 January 2012

Snow Patrol may not as well known as U2 or Coldplay, but the British group has much in common with both bands. Like Coldplay’s Chris Martin, Snow Patrol’s Gary Lightbody...

News image

Rihanna - Talk That Talk

2011 | Administrator | Monday, 5 December 2011

Lady Gaga is audacious and Britney Spears is troubled, but Rihanna is unquestionably pop’s naughty girl, a church-raised singer who didn’t hesitate to call her third CD Good Girl Gone...

Features

News image

Kathleen Edwards is an Emotional Voyageur

2012 | Administrator | Tuesday, 13 December 2011

A lot can change in four years—especially in the music world. In 2008, when Kathleen Edwards released her album Asking for Flowers, the Ottawa native was known primarily for story songs about other characters, some drawn...

News image

The Midway State - From Riches to Rags and Back Again

2011 | Administrator | Wednesday, 31 August 2011

Nathan Ferraro doesn’t seem the least bit bitter—which is surprising, given everything he’s been through. In fact, the affable, afro-haired frontman exudes all the serenity of a Buddhist monk, as he sits in a Toronto café...

News image

Hey Rosetta! - Literary songwriting worth yelling about

2012 | Administrator | Sunday, 4 March 2012

Tim Baker has a problem. As frontman for Newfoundland’s Hey Rosetta!, one of Canada’s fastest-rising, hardest-working bands, he is touring for nine months of the year, performing concerts on three continents. Trouble is, Baker is also...

News image

Great Lake Swimmers' new energy

2012 | Administrator | Sunday, 3 June 2012

For Tony Dekker, recording—like real estate—is all about location. The Great Lake Swimmers frontman has made a habit of working in unusual settings, beginning with his Toronto-based group’s 2003 self-titled debut, which was recorded in an...