Calendar

Lectures

MOAH’s lectures are free for MOAH Members and $10 for Non-Members. Cash Only. BECOME A MOAH MEMBER TODAY!

Thursday, November 21 @ 6:30pm or live stream over Zoom!
”History of Local 1960’s Music and Musicians,” presented by Stephen Dunne, Corry Arnold and Javier Pacheco. More information is below in “Lecture Spotlight.”

This Lecture will be live streamed on Nov. 21st at 6:30 p.m. It is free for MOAH Members and $10 for Non-Members.

How to Receive Live Stream Access:

  1. Register for the lecture using THIS LINK

  2. If you are a member, MOAH staff will email you the link.

  3. If you are not a member, please pay $10 using the Donate button below or call 650-321-1004 to pay over the phone.

  4. Once the admission fee is paid, MOAH staff will email you the link.

  5. Join us on November 21st @ 6:30pm

Summer Concerts

MOAH’s Summer Concert Series. Free for MOAH Members and $10 for Non-Members. Cash Only.

Thank you to all those who joined us for the 2024 Summer Concert Series! A special thank you to our Summer Concert performers! We will see you next year.

 

Events

Thurs., November 7th @ 5pm
Volunteer Appreciation Dinner

Thurs., December 5th @ 5pm
Members-Only Holiday Party featuring LEGO®!
Become a
MOAH Member today for a special viewing of the LEGO® show before it opens to the public!

BayLUG Holiday Show featuring LEGO®
Saturdays and Sundays, 11am to 3:30pm. Begins December 7th and Ends January 11th. $4 per person, Cash Only. Free for MOAH Members


Lecture Spotlight!

History of Local 1960’s Music and Musicians

Thursday, November 21st @ 6:30pm - Held inside MOAH’s Learning Center - Free for Members, $10 for Non-members.

The evening will include an informed overview of the history of the amazing of the local Palo Alto and area music scene.  Topics to be covered will include the origins of the music influences on this area, the intricate web of relationships among  local musicians, the significant venues where events were held, some of the important recording locations and the presentation of archival photos.  Many very ingrained individuals including those involved with local music stores from the day and musicians who were directly part of these bands have personally contributed material for this panel-format presentation.  Please come with your notepad and a few of your own stories to share as we get together to celebrate this magical time in our local history.

Presenters

“Stephen Dunne grew up in the Allied Arts area of Menlo Park, attending St. Raymond’s and later Bellarmine/Los Altos High for high schools.  While at Cloverleaf Ranch Summer Camp in Petaluma in the Summer of ’64, a camp counselor showed him a few chords on the guitar which inspired him to return home and immediately ask for a guitar and lessons.  Since his older brother already was playing a trumpet from Dana Morgan and Sons, the first music store to come to mind was there and that was where Jerry Garcia was giving lessons.  After almost a year, Jerry asked Stephen in May of ’65 to end lessons because Jerry was ‘starting a band’ so he continued playing on his own.  Now, Stephen has his own local rock cover band where he lives in Portola Valley named the “Los Trancolizers” which is affectionately named after the original “Los Trancos Marching Band”.

"Corry Arnold was raised in Palo Alto. He is the proprietor of the rock music history blogs "Lost Live Dead" and "Rock Prosopography," and has done extensive research on the '60s and '70s rock history of Palo Alto. He is retired. His first rock concert was seeing the Grateful Dead at Winterland on December 12, 1972."

Javier Pacheco:

“Born in Palo Alto, California of Mexican heritage Javier B Pacheco started playing piano professionally in rock bands at 15. He's going to share what it was like to grow up between Redwood City and Palo Alto during the years 1963 to 1973, when he was most involved in rock music. After 1974, Javier gravitated toward Latin, jazz and salsa, performing with many different groups comprised of distinct ethnic musicians. He's a recipient of a B.A. in Music History from SFSU (1974), an M.A. in Music (1986), & a PhD in Ethnomusicology from UCLA (1994). He has directed his own salsa ensembles and is an accomplished music transcriber as well as arranger.”

Watch a UCSC recording of two students being interviewed about lessons with Jerry Garcia at Dana Morgan.

Click here to watch the video!


Exhibits

Newest Exhibition:
Just for the Record: Classic Players & Phonographs!
(Opens October 18, 2024 to March 2, 2025)

Special Exhibits:
Find Your Way: Navigation Tools Large and Small
(Open now until January 2025) 


Making Music

(October 18, 2024 until Spring 2025).