Shows

Previous events

Discover a festive Marketplace that's fun for the entire family. Enjoy the outdoor cafes, colorful boutiques and galleries that say "Olde Cape Cod." Visit the Raw Bar with its

award-winning "Best Lobster Roll on the Cape". Concerts and special events take place throughout the Summer months so check the event schedule frequently to see what's happening at the Popponesst Marketplace!

Slater Mill's First Strike Festival commemorating when, nearly 200 years ago, 100 hundred women weavers walked out of the textile mills in the village of Pawtucket beginning the first industrial labor strike in America.

Hosted at Old Slater Mill National Historic Landmark on Saturday, May 11, 2024 from 12 PM - 4 PM in downtown Pawtucket, RI.

Performance Schedule:

12:00 PM - J. Michael Graham (short performance and welcome) 12:30 PM - Kim Moberg 1:30 PM - JMW School of the Arts dance performance 2:00 PM - Mystic Garland Dancers dance performance plus Maypole time 2:45 PM - Kala Farnham

For the Full Schedule, visit https://www.nps.gov/blrv/learn/historyculture/1824-strike.htm

Transforming the Culture of Power Conference

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Woolman Hill Retreat Center, 107 Keets Rd., Deerfield, MA

The Third Annual Transforming the Culture of Power Conference will focus on teachings about the Seven Fires Prophecy which speak about the “Lighting of the Eighth Fire,” when people from all races will unite as one to build a Nation based on equity and justice where all races will live in brotherhood and peace.

Presenters include MaryEllen Baker of Lac Court Oreilles Reservation; Tinker Shuman of Lac Du Flambeau Reservation; Joseph Many Horses and Danielle Leblanc who will teach about the Medicine Wheel and the Seven Grandfathers; Kim Moberg , an award-winner singer songwriter of Tlingit descent will offer a work- shop on her Seven Fire Prophecy album; Margaret Del Fuente will give a presentation on the Moon Dance teachings; The Ministry of O will present on the Wisdom of the Moon. Loretta Afraid of Bear Cook , a member of the 13 Indigenous Grandmothers, will speak about rites of Passage for youth. Grandmother Strong Oak will speak about the Medicine Wheel from the perspective of human development and gender-based wellbeing. The Transforming the Culture of Power Conference will be presented as an in-person event.

The in-person event will be held at Woolman Hill Retreat Center in Deerfield, Massachusetts on110 acres of land. The event will be video recorded on site and will be made available to those on the waiting list. ASL interpretation and Spanish interpretation will be available. The Seven Grandfather teachings, Walking in Balance with All Our Relations, the importance of Storytelling and Ceremonies in the healing of trauma will be highlighted. There will be teachings about the thirteen moons for both men and women. Workshops will cover the voices of youth, and the importance of prevention strategies and healing interventions for those who harm and for those who have been harmed in relationships. Other workshops will share the experiences of community Circle practitioners who work with survivors, prisoners, and people in re-entry.

In the evening, after the teachings of the day are done, there will be opportunities to participant in healing ceremonies with the elders. The venue can host 150 people. This is an in-person only event. In-person registration will be limited to the first 150 registrants on a first-come-first-serve basis.

Transforming the culture of power means, among other things, understanding that treating each other equally is not the same as treating each other equitably. A one size fits all equality model doesn’t account for the fact that everyone is different, occupies different positions of relative power (or lack thereof), and has different needs. Treating people equitably involves supporting each other to meet our unique needs and doing our best to rectify power imbalances when we see them. Genuinely transforming the culture of power in which we live means we take a critical look at where we stand on the scales of privilege and oppression and ask ourselves what we need and can do to help balance those scales. To that end, for BIPOC, registration for this conference involves no charge (though you are still welcome to donate if you would like). VBCIC acknowledges that many white participants may be unable to donate, so there is no mandatory cost. However, white participants who have the means to do so are strongly encouraged to reflect on that privilege, consider this an opportunity for both transformation and reparations, and to make a donation that you feel is reasonable (suggested amount $25-$250.), to help offset costs and provide equitable admission for BIPOC and others with less access to wealth. Register at visioningbear.org. Please indicate any special accommodations you may need.

Incredible music by Maxfield Anderson, Lydia Harrell, Anju Madhok, Stephanie McKay, Kim Moberg, Alastair Moock, and Gabriella Simpkins!

Curated by musician Mark Erelli, the 2nd SHIFT Music Series features a wide array of performers from a variety of genres including roots, rock, blues, and folk. While the musicians appearing in the series come from diverse backgrounds,each in some way reflects the innovative, exploratory American spirit that our Museum celebrates.

The Folk Collective was founded in 2022 by Boston’s historic Club Passim and Curator of Music and Culture, Shea Rose, to help find new paths towards inclusion and belonging – both at the club and in the greater Boston music community.

$20 pp

Reclaiming Folk: A Celebration of People of Color in Folk Music is a celebration of people of color in Folk Music. Folk Music is traditional music, folk music is storytelling, folk music is music of the people, folk music is a voice for what’s happening in the world today. This program was created by Naomi Westwater and made available through several grants. The series is on tour throughout Massachusetts to bring awareness and celebration to the origin of Folk. This event is funded by the Chatham Cultural Council.

Naomi Westwater holds a Master of Music in Contemporary Performance and Production from Berklee College of Music and she is a part of The Club Passim Folk Collective, where she produces Re-Imagining Lilith Fair: a tribute to the feminist music scene of the 1990s with an intersection lens for today. Naomi was nominated for a 2021 and 2022 Boston Music Award for best singer-songwriter, and has been featured in The Boston Globe, Under The Radar, WBUR, WGBH, and The Bluegrass Situation.

FREE and FAMILY FRIENDLY

The Reclaiming Folk Event Series is a celebration of people of color in folk music. Folk music is traditional music, folk music is storytelling, folk music is music of the people, and folk music is a voice for what’s happening in the world today.

In our society, there is often no space for marginalized people to tell their stories. Reclaiming Folk seeks to make space for musicians of color to tell their stories and tell the stories of our past, so that our future can be a more inclusive place for all.

We are Reclaiming Folk because history has forgotten that people of color have always been at the root of American folk music. From field calls to blues to gospel, the origin of American folk music is connected to people of color.

This 90 minute program includes a 60 minute performance by three Massachusetts based folk artists of color—Naomi Westwater, Pamela Means, and Kim Moberg—singing songs in the round. Each musician will play original songs and one traditional folk song by a musician of color. Following the performance will be a 30 minute talk back—moderated by Boston Poet Laureate Porsha Olayiwola, who will also read a poem—where the musicians will talk about their songs and their experience as folk musicians. There will be time for audience Q&A.

Curated by Naomi Westwater, a queer, Black-multiracial singer-songwriter from Massachusetts whose work combines folk music, poetry, and spirituality.

FREE | REGISTRATION REQUIRED See Ticket Link

FREE | REGISTRATION REQUIRED

The Charles River Museum "Mill Talks" series features lectures and panel discussions on topics related to the Industrial Revolution, innovation across disciplines, and the mission of the Charles River Museum of Industry & Innovation, which is to encourage and inspire future innovation in America.

This event will feature artists Maxfield Anderson, Anju Madhok, Kim Moberg, Alastair Moock and Stephanie McKay, members of Club Passim's The Folk Collective.

The series is presented in partnership with the WGBH Forum Network and is sponsored by The Lowell Institute.

Mar12

A Place At The Table - Falmouth Cultural Council

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St. Barnabas Episcopal Church, 91 Main St., Falmouth, MA

Music at the Table which is a collaborative project with St. Barnabas’ free lunch program, A Place at the Table. A Place at the Table is bi-weekly (Tuesdays & Thursdays) from 11:30 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. in the Great Hall, the large building at the back of St. B’s campus. A Place at the Table provides free hot meals for guests who are often unhoused and food insecure, but welcomes all community members.

Pamela Means Kim Moberg Opens

Club Passim, 47 Palmer St., Cambridge, MA

Pamela Means, singer-songwriter and jazz musician, is “one of the fiercest guitar players and politically-rooted musicians in the industry today,” (Curve Magazine) with her “insanely brilliant” (Press Herald, Portland ME) and “stark, defiant songs.” (New York Times)

Pamela Means is a Easthampton MA-based Out(spoken), Biracial, independent artist whose “kamikaze guitar style” and punchy provocative songs have worn a hole in two of her acoustic guitars. With razor wit, an engaging presence, elegant poetry, irresistible charm, plus jokes, Pamela Means’s “stark, defiant songs” (New York Times) set the status quo and the stage afire.

Pamela’s commitment to interrogating social ills was fostered by her unique childhood. “As the adopted daughter of a white mother and black father, I learned about dismantling systems of oppression from the inside out.” Pamela received her first guitar at the age of fourteen, just after her mother died of cancer, and it soon became Pamela’s primary vehicle for expression. It would also serve as a passport out of a life that consisted of poverty, foster homes, and the inner city life of hyper-segregated Milwaukee WI.

Pamela Means relocated to Boston, busked in the city subway and famed Harvard Square, founded her own record label and began touring. Pamela has since performed on three continents and across the country, gaining fans and rave reviews from Anchorage to Amsterdam, Sydney to Stockholm, San Francisco to Honolulu to New York, breaking album sales records at national festivals and sharing stages with Pete Seeger, Neil Young, Shawn Colvin, Joan Baez, Richie Havens, Gil Scott-Heron, Adrian Belew, Violent Femmes, Holly Near and more. Means has also been the recipient of several nominations and music awards in multiple categories.

Kim Moberg opens.

$20 / Members $18

On January 21 we are planning a great afternoon of entertainment to honor and help our brother Jimmy Simpson. As many of you know he is working to overcome a severe medical setback, and as many of you also know he has always been the first in line to help a fellow musician or neighbor. We are going to have fun and hopefully raise some cash. The line up is as follows: 2-3 Vanna Pacella 3-4 Nils Soderberg and Friends 4-5 Leslie Gage and Rumblewagon with special guest Kim Moberg 5-6 A Band of Brothers James Ellis will be The MC and Stage Manager There will be some great guest musicians as well Please show your support anyway you can. We're going to have a celebration!

On Sunday, January 14, 2023 at 7pm, Opening Doors is excited to present a FREE concert and conversation with The Folk Collective, a diverse group of musicians and cultural thought leaders tapped by historic Club Passim to challenge and redefine the look and sound of Boston’s “folk music” scene. For this special concert – hosted at Melrose Unitarian Universalist Church on the Sunday of Martin Luther King Weekend – members of The Collective will perform together and then engage in a conversation about communal activism and Dr. King’s “beloved community.”

The Folk Collective was founded in 2022 by Passim’s Curator of Music and Culture, Shea Rose. Brought in by the club to help advise on matters of equity and belonging, Shea manifested a vision of a new kind of cooperative – one made up of various races, genders, orientations, and ages – which could help model and think through true artistic inclusivity. Charter members of The Collective include Almira Ara, Anju, Audrey Pearl, Cliff Notez, Gabriella Simpkins, Kim Moberg, Lydia Harrell, Maxfield Anderson, Naomi Westwater, Peter Mulvey, Stephanie McKay, and Opening Door’s own Alastair Moock.

Learn more and reserve your seats at https://www.openingdoorsproject.net/live-events/

Yule for Fuel

Wellfleet Harbor Actors' Theatre, 2357 Old Rte 6 Rd, Wellfleet, MA

Yule for Fuel began in 2007 as a way to help local families stay warm during the winter months. We partner with the Lower Cape Outreach Council which provides fuel assistance for those in need.

Yule for Fuel returns this year with your favorite Cape Cod performers and musicians in an evening of music, merriment, and mirth, all in support of Lower Cape Outreach Council's Fuel Assistance Program.

$25

Booking

To book Kim Moberg for gigs, house concerts, fundraisers, private events:
Select CONTACT tab or
kimmobergmusic@gmail.com

"Above Ground" CD Release Concert
(pc: cbrodt photography)

(pc Rachel Moberg)