By Date
Best of Summer
- Amusement Parks
- Art Events
- Art Galleries
- Art Museums
- Other Museums
- Beaches
- Comedy
- Dance
- Fairs and Festivals
- Farmers Markets
- Flea Markets
- Food Trucks
- Music
- Outdoor Dining
- Sightseeing
- Sky Stuff
- Theater
- Water Stuff
Events
- Food
- Art Events
- Music
- Classical Music
- Benefits
- Comedy
- Dance
- Fairs & Festivals
- General Events
- Gay & Lesbian
- Lit Events
- Seasonal
- Talks
- Theater
Places
- Restaurants
- Bars
- Club Directory
- Comedy Clubs
- Movie Theaters
- Theaters
- Ski - Downhill
- Ski - Cross-Country
- Adult Education
By Neighborhood
- Back Bay
- Central Square
- Brookline
- Allston-Brighton
- Beacon Hill
- Harvard Square
- Charlestown
- Davis Square
- See More »
All Neighborhoods
- Allston-Brighton
- Back Bay
- Beacon Hill
- Brookline
- Cambridge
- Charlestown
- Davis Square
- Fenway
- Harvard Square
- Inman Square
- Arlington Center
- Porter Square
- North End
- Kenmore-BU
- Somerville
- South End
- Union Square
- North End
- Out of town
- Worcester
- Jamaica Plain
- Financial District
- Central Square
- Brookline Village
Editors' Picks
Bill Callahan + Ed Askew
Indie vet Bill Callahan has been producing low-fi, underground rock long before today’s crop of DIY-indie kids rediscovered the charms of the cassette tape. Callahan — a/k/a Smog, his longtime recording moniker — began producing his music on four-track tape recorders more than two decades ago. Smog’s first EP, 1990’s Sewn to the Sky, demonstrated a penchant for discordant sounds, sub-par instruments, and a fierce dedication to self-production. Since those days, Callahan’s music has evolved to include sleeker lines and complex lyricism, marked by his distinct baritone. But his early aesthetic lingers just below the surface.
Bill Callahan (born 1966), also known as Smog and (Smog), is an American singer-songwriter born in Silver Spring, Maryland. Callahan began working in the lo-fi...
Ed Askew cut one of the best and most obscure LPs in the original ESP Disk’s vague rock/folk/freak series, issued eponymously and since reissued as...