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The Underground Club – Allston, MA 1980 – 81

January 31, 2016 - Performance Venues
The Underground Club – Allston, MA  1980 – 81

The Underground was a music club located in the Allston neighborhood of Boston that featured local, national and international acts performing independent and post-punk music. Although the emerging acts who played there included Mission of Burma, The Cure and New Order, its lifespan was short, from February 1980 until June 1981.

Jim Coffman, a Boston University Sophomore who was waiting tables at the nearby restaurant Our House, started the club after convincing the same owners of the pub Sweet Virginia’s (whose boss was the infamous Boston club owner Henry Vara) to turn over the dying business at 1110 Commonwealth Avenue, an L-shaped wood-paneled venue (one-time home of music club Brandy’s II. As Doug Simmons wrote in his 1981 Boston Phoenix postmortem for the club, The Underground’s opening launched “the city’s most far-ranging search for underground talent,” adding that “never had so many bands traveled so far to play in front of so few for so little.”

“The effect on the local Boston scene was even more dramatic,” Simmons also wrote. The Underground provided support for a mix of Boston bands: among others, the teen rock of Boys Life and The Outlets, the punk-funk of the Suade Cowboys and Prince Charles and the City Beat Band, the new wave of Peter Dayton and The Neats and, most of all, the art-rock of Mission of Burma (whom Coffman would later manage), Bound ‘n’ Gagged and Someone and the Somebodies.

In addition to nurturing homegrown talent, The Underground booked many bands from across the U.S. and abroad. Besides The Cure and New Order making their Boston debuts there, other out-of-towners headlining the club included such American indie acts as The Bongos, Lydia Lunch and 8-Eyed Spy, Shrapnel, Bush Tetras, Los Microwaves, The dB’s, The Suburbs and Pylon. Brian Brain, Delta 5, Bauhaus, Au Pairs, Blurt, A Certain Ratio and Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark were among the British acts to play there, as did Canada’s DOA and Northern Ireland’s Protex.

Although accounts vary on the specific reasons for the club’s demise, all cite ongoing tension between the club, whose lease had an option through 1990, and Boston University, which had purchased the building housing The Underground shortly before it opened and turned the above-ground floors into a dormitory. Landlord-tenant squabbles ensued, leaving CCCPTV, People in Stores, The Dark and headliners The Neats to play The Underground’s final night on June 14, 1981. The crowd in attendance pulled down the drop ceiling, punched through walls and flooded the bathrooms. Dormitory students flooded through the shared entrance and confronted the club goers with some students dropping bottles from their dorm rooms. Members of the rock band “Jomo Birds” were seen cowering behind their amplifiers in the ensuing mayhem.

– From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Seven Questions

What made The Underground unique or special?

Why do you think the Underground was able to land big names like the Cure, OMD, New Order, and the other “Big Door” venues didn’t?

What different types of people would you find at an Underground show?

Are you going to Spit or The Underground?

The Underground had a short successful run, what is its legacy?

Do you have a favorite Underground story?

Should there be a statue built of club manager Jim Coffman and placed outside the BU laundry mat that replaced The Underground?

 

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