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New Boston After School Program Launches This Fall

A new Boston after school program is set to launch in October and continue through the end-of-year winter break. The program comes courtesy of 617Peak. If you’re not familiar with…

Charlie Puth poses with students at a Boston after school program.

(Photo by Scott Eisen/Getty Images for VH1 Save The Music Foundation)

A new Boston after school program is set to launch in October and continue through the end-of-year winter break.

The program comes courtesy of 617Peak. If you're not familiar with the program, here's the description from their website:

617Peak is an arts non-profit providing Boston youth with platforms for creative expression. Our organization supports youth through writing, music, and literacy; while providing them space to create, perform, and develop. We serve middle and high school students in communities of color throughout the greater Boston area. We promote literacy and creativity amongst peers, aiming to create more avenues and resources for students in inner cities, empowering them to be autonomous in their future successes.

New Boston After School Program Launches This Fall

The after school program takes place at CASH, which is the Community Academy of Science and Health. They're located at 11 Charles St in Boston. Students with interest in music will have the opportunity to explore subjects like performance, recording and audio engineering, business management, songwriting, publishing, marketing, video production, and more. The program kicks off on Wednesday, October 4 and takes place Wednesdays after school from 3-6 p.m., running through winter break.

Oh, and this is important to note: there's no financial requirement for participation. And the program is open to all Boston students, whether they're enrolled in Boston Public Schools proper or they're enrolled in a charter school, private school, or are part of the METCO program. The information sheet/permission slip sign up can be found here. And if you're reading this and you don't have a student in Boston but would like to support 617Peak and programs like this one, you can make a donation here.

Who knows? You might just be helping fund the next young talent to come out of Boston and make a name for themselves in the music industry!

When a study claiming to have sussed out the most popular classic rock bands in America pops up in my feed, you know I have to share it.

And you know I have to share my opinions on it. If you're reading this and you're not a regular ROCK 92.9 listener, my name is Adam 12. I'm the Program Director of Boston's ROCK 92.9 and I'm on the air weekdays from 11 a.m. until 4 p.m. And when I'm not on the air, I'm scouring my social feeds for things to talk about on the air. You know, like the most popular classic rock bands, nationwide.

The lion's share of the bands on the list you'll see below I either: a) play on ROCK 92.9 on the regular, or b) grew up listening to on rock radio. I'm a North Shore kid, born and raised on WBCN, WFNX, and WAAF. Hell, I worked on-air at two of those three radio stations. I'm sharing all of this so you won't think I'm some crank with lousy takes. What I'm trying to say is I have some credibility.

The list comes courtesy of Sell Easy and it's called The Most Popular Classic Rock Band in Every U.S. State. Here's how the put it all together: "we created a list of 70 rock bands that were at their peak popularity pre-1990. Using the bands as a list of search terms, we analyzed each band’s Google Trends search interest from 2004 to 2023." Then they compared the search interest state-by-state.

You can see the full 50 state breakdown here, or at the graphic I've shared below. I'm focusing on the six New England states, because these are my friends and neighbors and I need to tell them how on-point (or how wrong) they are to love these bands the most. Let's begin.

Connecticut

Van Halen - Can't argue with this pick at all. Groundbreaking act, beloved by generations of rockers. My only problem is that the study didn't specify between Roth-era and Van Hagar. I'll just assume it's the latter.

Maine

Queen - Is it wrong that I don't think of Queen as "classic rock?" I mean, yes, of course they're classic rock. It's just that when I think of "classic rock" I put the emphasis on the "rock" part. And while Queen rocks plenty, there are other acts that rock harder. But hey, maybe Maine is listening to this track while drinking Fat Ass in a Glass.

Massachusetts

The Rolling Stones - Look, I'm not going to sit here and disrespect the Stones. They are legend; I wouldn't fault any classic rocker who named them as a favorite. But Massachusetts, you couldn't go local with this one? I was fully expecting Aerosmith as the top pick, but secretly hoping it would be The Cars.

New Hampshire

Led Zeppelin - The unofficial rock band of the Granite State. I think in my 46 years on earth, more than 50% of the Led Zeppelin I've heard is on radio stations in New Hampshire. Best served from a rusty pickup truck with a "LIVE FREE OR DIE" bumper sticker.

Rhode Island

Black Sabbath - HELL yes. Now THIS is a pick I can get behind. Van Halen, the Stones, and Zep are all fine. But they're obvious. It takes a bit more character to step up and say you're a Sabbath guy, gal, or non-binary pal. You go, Li'l Rhody.

Vermont

Grateful Dead - Of course. Who else would it be? FOH with this jam band nonsense, Vermont.

adam12Writer
Adam 12 is the Program Director of Boston's ROCK 92.9, heard weekdays from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. He's been flexing his encyclopedic rock knowledge in New England for over 2 decades, both on-air and online, at WBCN, WFNX, Boston.com, and indie617. At ROCK 92.9, he keeps you in the know on the big stories from the Boston music scene and writes about great places to eat, drink (beer), and to spend time outdoors in and around Boston.