History  |  Praise and Press  |   Appearances  |  Guests

*** The next Pastures show will be Thursday, September 24 at Club Passim ***

History

Pastures

Boston singer-songwriter Alastair Moock first started putting together his Pastures of Plenty shows almost ten years ago. The idea was to bridge some of the gaps in the Boston music scene — between the folk and roots rock crowds, between the contemporary and traditional scenes, and between younger and older players. But what it really came down to was bringing together some of the region's best songwriters and musicians to swap tunes on a stage.

Past shows have taken place at premier venues and events throughout the northeast, including the Newport and Boston Folk Festivals, and many Boston area coffeehouses. A number of shows have also been performed for children at various events.

The list of guests over the years reads like a who's who of New England folk and roots musicians: Bill Morrissey, Lori McKenna, Ronnie Earl, Kris Delmhorst, Catie Curtis, Barrence Whitfield, Sarah Borges, Dennis Brennan, Rani Arbo, Mark Erelli, The Resophonics, and The Silver Leaf Gospel Singers, to name just a few (full list below).

Starting in 2008, Moock brought Pastures back to its original home at Club Passim in Harvard Square for a series of bi-monthly shows featuring a revolving cast of stellar songwriters and musicians.




Praise and Press

The Boston Globe:
“Pastures of Plenty shows [are] jam-happy hootenannies with swashbuckling doses of impromptu adventure and sly reinventions of old folk chestnuts... The hippest hootenanies in town”

The Boston Herald:
“A wonderful concert that proves how well folk-popsters can mine the inexhaustibly valuable vein of American songs...”

Beth Harrington, Director, The Winding Stream: A Musical Journey with the Original Carter Family:
“I have had the distinct pleasure of hearing Pastures of Plenty at a concert connected to my latest film project about the Original Carter Family. While this fantastic group of musicians played, I couldn't help thinking how ol' A.P. Carter himself would have been so pleased to know that young people like this still understood the essence of great songs, great arrangements and great playing. They are the living embodiment of a very old tradition, but one that still clearly speaks to us in the present day. I love ‘em.”

Marilyn Rea Beyer, WUMB-FM:
“Moock and his gang of American roots-loving pals honor the tradition and give it a good swift kick into the 21st century. Better yet, the players are so good, they make it look easy — so the virtuosity looks like plain old back porch fun. Grab a three-legged stool and plunk yerself down for some great music worth telling the neighbors about.”

Betsy Siggins, Executive Director, Club Passim:
“The heart of a Pastures show, is the sweet echo of the past intertwined with a world weary knowing of today. Magical, rootsy and wise.”

Mark Erelli, Singer-Songwriter:
“Woody Guthrie once wrote that he wanted to write songs which made people feel that they were ‘bound to win.’ Alastair Moock's Pastures of Plenty is a rollicking celebration of music and community that would make Guthrie proud. Moock's respect for tradition never gets in the way of his irreverence for the lines between past and present, performer and audience. By the end of the show, everyone is singing and stomping their feet to the music, and everyone is a winner.”

  • Read a Boston Globe article about Pastures
  • Read an interview with Moock about Pastures in The Club Passim Listening Room



Selected Appearances

  • 2008 Cambridge Riverfest (Cambridge, MA)
  • 2006 First Night Celebration (Worcester, MA)
  • 2005 Boston Folk Festival (Boston, MA)
  • 2004 Central Square World's Fair (Cambridge, MA)
  • 2002 Newport Folk Festival (Newport, RI)
  • Club Passim (Cambridge, MA)
  • The Coolidge Corner Theater (Brookline, MA)
  • Johnny D's Uptown (Somerville, MA)
  • The Linden Tree Coffeehouse (Wakefield, MA)
  • The Lizard Lounge (Cambridge, MA)
  • The Me and Thee Coffeehouse (Marblehead, MA)
  • The Mozaic Room Coffeehouse (Avon, MA)
  • A New Song Coffeehouse (Bedford, MA)
  • The Regent Theater (Arlington, MA)
  • The Uncommon Coffeehouse (Framingham, MA)
  • WUMB Member Concert Series (Boston, MA)



Guests: 2000 - 2009

 






© 2007 Alastair Moock. All rights reserved.