Diner Finder OnlineThe Diner Finder is the Internet’s best source of real diner information.

See for yourself!

Latest News

Worth Listening

thom_brooklynThe most courageous thing any musician can do is to get up in front of an audience and, armed only with a keyboard or guitar, sing a song they created.

There might not seem to be much of that in these days of contrived and manufactured celebrity, where talent takes a back seat to “marketability.” After all, when producers can actually correct the pitch of a weak or faltering voice, even live, and layers of digitized accompaniment can add sparkle to dull songwriting, who needs talent?

Besides, who’s listening, anyway? Music serves most folks simply as accompaniment to their own lives. To burst through the wall of background-​noise they hear every day, a song has to catch their attention the first time they hear it blasting out of that background. It’s the popular styles that do that. Who takes the time to find substance?

Some folks do. For many of them — like me - all that style only gets in the way. I recall once seeing country-​star Shania Twain in concert on TV, singing her hit “Feels Like a Woman.” It’s hard to hear any fiddle on that song on the radio, but I swear as she danced to it on-​stage she was surrounded by at least a half-​dozen dancing fiddlers, all of them young, trim and movie-​star handsome. Just like every fiddler I’ve ever seen.

The music-industry’s need for overwhelming music makes life hard for the singer-​songwriter. It’s hard to create a wall of noise with two instruments, neither of them digitized. Yet there are so many of them writing and performing songs that need listening to. So many of them have something to say we should want to hear.

Here in New England at least, it’s easy to find places where you can do it. I spent a recent Saturday evening at one such venue, and for the price of what I was willing to drop in a hat, I was entertained, enlightened and impressed by three musicians whose talent matched many of today’s music-​stars, even if their decibel levels didn’t.

An item of full disclosure here. One of these musicians happened to be my wife, Jan Luby. That’s okay, though. I liked her music before I fell in love with her. Besides, shilling for specific musicians, or for this specific venue, is not the point here. There are literally hundreds of talented singer-​songwriters for whom music is an essential avocation even if the state of the industry makes it impossible for them to make music their vocation. Some of them are brilliant - as good as any major star in the biz. And yes, some of them are awful, but no more awful than many of the frauds that have the attention of the unwashed masses.

For the record, the show I attended featured Steve Allain and GW Mercure as well as Jan. It was part of a twice-​monthly series conducted by the Rhode Island Songwriters Association at Providence’s Brooklyn Coffee & Tea House. As with most RISA shows, the three brought three distinct styles to the Brooklyn. Steve, pictured here, played music that was low-​key and introspective without falling into that cloying rut that gives acoustic music such a bad rep. Besides, his acoustic-​guitar playing sparkled. Jan comes from an R&B background with a heavy hit of blues. G.W. was the young guy and had that alternative thing going. Hey, I’m not a music critic here, so sorry for any cliches. The point is, I liked them all.

I liked as much the atmosphere of the show. The Brooklyn isn’t much bigger than a living room, and it’s just as comfortable. A coffee is a buck, and proprietor Tony makes a mean apple pie, one of which came out of the oven just as people were gathering. Just like at Grandma’s.

Even better, while at a bigtime concert you get treated like cattle, and the performers are so obviously a higher form of human than us mere mortals, here we all were in it together. These performers discussed their songs while readying to play them, and the audience chatted right back at them. Someone might ask where a song-​idea came from. The musicians would gladly respond, appreciating that someone cared enough to ask. Again, it was an atmosphere as comfortable as your living room. In fact at one recent show the performers chose to shut off the microphone and PA system. There just wasn’t a need.

This kind of show happens all over New England - as well as across the country. But they’re not hyped like the bigtime concerts. Still, I’ll bet your local paper lists such shows in its entertainment section, under the dreaded “Folk” listing or maybe under “Acoustic” or “Traditional.” And if you have one of those alternative papers in your area you might even find some information about performers beyond just the listings.

The point is, if you think music is worth an effort beyond swallowing what’s being jammed down your throat, then it’s worth a little effort to find some interesting stuff. Then the listening will come easily. Along with a good piece of pie.

The Brooklyn Coffee & Tea House is located at 209 Douglas Ave., Route 7, in Providence. RISA shows happen on the first and third Saturdays of the month and start at 8 p.m.

Riding Shotgun

Diner Finder Updates

Tin Goose Diner
Tin Goose Diner
Name: Tin Goose Diner
State: OH
Makris Diner
Makris Diner
Name: Makris Diner
State: CT
Quintessence
Quintessence
Name: Quintessence
State: NY
Garden Buffet
Garden Buffet
Name: Garden Buffet
State: NJ
Tacos La Hacienda
Tacos La Hacienda
Name: Tacos La Hacienda
State: NY
Show more…

Get Roadateria

Subscribe to our e-​blast newsletter.




Roadside Wire

Prev Next

Where the G stands for Goodbye to diners

04-​29-​2012

Where the G stands for Goodbye to diners

Not to get overly cynical, but what took Mrs. G so long? The diner sat unused for nearly a quarter… Read more

Restoring the simple fun

04-​09-​2012

Restoring the simple fun

We’d like to think of this as a positive trend. With the end of “irrational exhuberance,” a return to simpler… Read more

Buffalo looks to Milwaukee for lessons on revival

04-​09-​2012

Buffalo looks to Milwaukee for lessons on revival

Milwaukee popped up on our radar more than ten years ago as a prime example of an ascending urban experience,… Read more

Fishtale Diner closes

03-​14-​2012

Fishtale Diner closes

It’s been a mean season for diners of late. Waterfront diner closes its doors By Dave Rogers You can see from this picture… Read more

Highways and the degradation of our cities

03-​09-​2012

Highways and the degradation of our cities

In this video, John Norquist from the Congress of New Urbanism explains what the urban interstates have done to our… Read more

Commuting via Amtrak in Oregon

03-​08-​2012

Commuting via Amtrak in Oregon

The Portland Oregonian filed this video showing some of the advantages of commuting via Amtrak. Wifi, local beers, space to… Read more

Portsmouth, New Hampsire wants in on passenger rail

03-​06-​2012

Portsmouth, New Hampsire wants in on passenger rail

This kind of development represents a much more palatable and doable alternative to all the “high-​speed” rail hysteria that has… Read more

Cincy’s beer heritage makes a comeback

02-​29-​2012

Cincy's beer heritage makes a comeback

The craft-​brew movement establishes a beach head along the Cincinnati riverfront! New brew pub promotes Cincinnati’s riverfront, beer history By David Holthaus THERead more

Ride Trains: Fall River rides rail for dinner

02-​27-​2012

Baby steps on the way to restoring inter-​city passenger service in New England starts with a good meal. Passenger train will… Read more

Historic movie houses face a new threat

02-​24-​2012

Digital distribution represents the biggest threat to the traditional movie house since television. Digital film switch daunts historic movie houses BUFFALO, N.Y.… Read more

Diners are Everywhere!

0282 DinerFinderCover2012-02

The Diner Finder 2012 edition is now available at Lulu​.com. Full color listing of nearly 2000 diners from around the world. Order yours today!

Support independent publishing: Buy this book on Lulu.

Latest Chatters

Feature Stories

  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
Prev Next

Issue 16 for your downloading pleasure

Issue 16 for your downloading pleasure

Thanks to a recent story published in the Washington DC City Paper and in honor of the soon-​to-​be-​open Capital City… Read more

Taking from Teek

Vacation for the Family Roadside inevitably includes a little diner hunting and chats with strangers at local bars. Wurtsboro, New York… Read more

Of Juicy Burgers and Slamming Doors

Of Juicy Burgers and Slamming Doors

Location, Zoning, and Savvy Ownership keeps 1920’s-era Neighborhood Shop in the Running Sara Debold, owner of the Lee Street Deli Neighborhood shops.… Read more

Six Days a Week

Six Days a Week

Story and Photos by Helen Anne Gately “You tryin’ to stay out of trouble?,” Scott greets Dan as he enters the… Read more

The Highland breakfast

The Highland breakfast

The Highland Park Diner is easy on the eyes, a tidy barrel-​roofed gem on South Clinton Street in Rochester, New… Read more

Charlie’s Reopens!

Kicked off its long-​time location by a greedy landlord, Charlie’s Diner sat on blocks for three years as owner… Read more

Buffalo to Butler: Birthdays, Baseball, and Buggie…

Buffalo to Butler: Birthdays, Baseball, and Buggies

Arcade Restaurant in Titusville, Pennsylvania — one of several stops on our road trip from Grand Island, New York to… Read more

Herd on the Highway

Herd on the Highway

We originally published this article in 2002 in issue #3 of By The Way magazine, and republish it in honor… Read more

Hope runs out: The American Diner Museum unloads i…

Hope runs out: The American Diner Museum unloads its follies

Diner Museum diner blowout sale underway! As regular readers know, this website has for the past ten years kept a close,… Read more

A Giant Pickle Barrel for Teenie Weenie Cartoonist

A Giant Pickle Barrel for Teenie Weenie Cartoonist

Nearly restored, Grand Marias’s tribute to one its own, William Donahey, creator of the Teenie Weenies. (Photo courtesy of the… Read more

In the Temple of Pie

In the Temple of Pie

Good pie nourishes not only the body but also the spirit. It requires generous measures of dedication, heaping cupfuls of… Read more

My Nashville Pilgrimage — Intro

Let the record show that I, Randy Garbin, publisher of Roadside Magazine and Road​sideOnline​.com, two of the finest documents of… Read more

Download Issue 27: Good Diners Good Neighborhoods

Download Issue 27: Good Diners Good Neighborhoods

Explore the Philadelphia’s Mayfair section back in 1997 and how the once-​great Mayfair Diner helped to bring about a revival… Read more

Show me the breakfast

Show me the breakfast

Best Breakfast Eats in Missouri by Ann M. Hazelwood Reedy Press, St. Louis, Missouri, $14.95 Ann M. Hazelwood is a show-​me native… Read more

Harvey House Returns to Kansas City

Photos and Story by Dirk Burhans When trains made a station stop, hungry travelers were… Read more

Roadside interviews Mr. Ed

We interviewed Mr. Ed from Mr. Ed’s Elephant Museum in Orrtanna, Pennsylvania in May 2002. We hoped to put together… Read more