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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsJoan Baez has announced her retirement from the stage at the age of 85.
Joan Baez has announced her retirement from the stage at the age of 85. âThis is not just the end of my career.
— Charles Keener (@charleskeener.bsky.social) 2026-05-12T21:38:15.839Z
Itâs the final chapter of an entire era â an era of idealism, of protest, of songs that dared to challenge power and awaken hearts.
Thank you for everything.
malaise
(298,141 posts)msongs
(74,241 posts)PatSeg
(53,593 posts)Botany
(77,897 posts)walkingman
(11,175 posts)for anyone that ever doubts how nasty white people can be, I saw some of my neighbors show their true colors. This was a small town and everybody knew everybody.
Sadly, we continue to fight these same battles 60 years later. ☮

sheshe2
(98,528 posts)Joinfortmill
(21,719 posts)sheshe2
(98,528 posts)Belmont and Cambridge were the launchpad for her career!
Baez began playing at Club 47 in Cambridge, a venue that was originally a jazz club but became a hub for the emerging folk revival. She was one of the first folk singers to perform there, and her clear soprano voice and heartfelt renditions of folk classics quickly earned her a reputation The Music Museum of New England+1. By her late teens, she was a regular headliner at these shows.
Her breakthrough came in 1959 when Bob Gibson invited her to perform at the Newport Folk Festival in Rhode Island, cementing her status as a rising star at age 18 History Cambridge+1. This performance helped launch her into national prominence, leading to a record deal with Vanguard Records in 1960.
In summary, Joan Baezs time in Massachusettsparticularly in Belmont and Cambridgewas the launchpad for her career. The citys folk music scene, Club 47, and the Newport Folk Festival all played pivotal roles in shaping her into one of Americas most influential folk artists and activists.
https://www.bing.com/search?q=Joan%20Baez%20lived%20in%20MA&qs=n&form=QBRE&sp=-1&lq=0&pq=joan%20baez%20lived%20in%20ma&sc=0-21&sk=&cvid=C597AB9019E5423586D2F36FBB85A9AA
Emrys
(9,207 posts)As she sang, the power and depth of her voice and its and her beauty had me in floods of tears, maybe partly because her music was an important part of my childhood as my brother and sister were around ten years older than me, and no doubt partly because I was absolutely off my face.
QueerDuck
(1,948 posts)Diamonds and Rust.
sheshe2
(98,528 posts)Back in the day, I played the guitar and sang many of her songs. 🫶❤️
Talitha
(8,166 posts)sheshe2
(98,528 posts)NBachers
(19,589 posts)sheshe2
(98,528 posts)yorkster
(3,958 posts)sop
(19,389 posts)and awaken hearts." Doesn't sound very hopeful for the future. Sadly, I think she's right.
BeneteauBum
(797 posts)Incumbent on us to move forward
.
Peace ☮️
GenThePerservering
(3,749 posts)I hope she continues to speak out.
Tanuki
(16,514 posts)and lend her voice to the fight against racist redistricting, voter suppression, and White supremacy.
https://www.instagram.com/brotherjones_/reel/DX8GOrthNwU/?hl=en
sheshe2
(98,528 posts)Thank you.
Rec
Brother Buzz
(40,476 posts)?si=8-hD_5pFiRlT67Uc
sheshe2
(98,528 posts)Thank you, Brother Buzz.
Beautiful.
Botany
(77,897 posts)The top video was less than 2 months ago. Joan had a life well lived.
Brother Buzz
(40,476 posts)Folk legend Joan Baez made a surprise appearance at Jesse Welles sold-out show at The Fillmore in San Francisco on November 4, 2025, performing a duet of his protest song "No Kings" and the Dylan classic "Don't Think Twice, It's All Right". This collaboration served as a symbolic "passing of the torch".
Jesse made the sojourn from Arkansas to Joan Baez backyard with his patented smile and a bounce in his step and let the magic happen.
FakeNoose
(42,486 posts)Thank you Joan Baez! One of the greatest folk singers ever - with the voice of an angel!!!
Dave Id
(335 posts)for all of you gifts in your activism and beautiful voice. You are cherished in our hearts.
BaronChocula
(4,789 posts)I'll even sing along to "The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down." But it's ok. It was written by a Canadian.
Niagara
(12,155 posts)LoisB
(13,537 posts)up against injustices for so many years.
COL Mustard
(8,400 posts)Damn glad I did. She has been an amazing force for almost my entire life.
I love you Joan!
allegorical oracle
(6,599 posts)sheshe2
(98,528 posts)Thank you, that was incredibly moving.
allegorical oracle
(6,599 posts)FailureToCommunicate
(14,620 posts)seen her perform countless times. I did get to meet her sisters and brother in law and her delightful parents. What a terrific loving family. No wonder she has always been on the correct side of civil rights, and justice, and not afraid to sing about it!
sheshe2
(98,528 posts)even though you missed out on meeting Joan.
FailureToCommunicate
(14,620 posts)unc70
(6,515 posts)She sang at the candlelight vigil from The Castro for Milk and Moscone back in 1978 in San Francisco. We were all so young.
Starbeach
(377 posts)Thank you for staying true all these years.
brer cat
(27,695 posts)for so long.
sheshe2
(98,528 posts)I so wish I had seen her.
swong19104
(663 posts)A few days ago, I was chatting with some 30-somethings and I mentioned Arlo Guthries Alices Restaurant. They never heard it or of it. I really wonder how many of the folk songs of the 60s and 70s are being listened by the younger generations.
I was also at a nightclub (of sorts) and the band was playing American standards like Route 66, Spanish Eyes, etc. Then they played CCRs Have You Ever Seen The Rain. CCR among the standards??
WheelWalker
(9,415 posts)deurbano
(3,008 posts)in 2010 at the Mountain Winery in Saratoga, CA. Kristofferson (one of my all-time faves) opened for Haggard (one of my all-time faves), and Kris came back out to sing/play with Haggard at the end... and then (in a huge surprise), John (one of my all-rime faves) and Joan (one of my all-time faves) joined them! Not sure there was anyone alive at that moment I wanted to see more than the four of them....or anywhere I would rather have been! (And I had seen them all separately several times.) Transplendent!
I saw Joan at a benefit tribute (to her) concert at the Masonic Auditorium in San Francisco (with other amazing legends) last year, and then at a No Kings rally in SF last fall. She has always been (and continues to be) an inspiration!
https://www.kqed.org/arts/13971571/joan-baez-review-masonic-san-francisco-sweet-relief
sheshe2
(98,528 posts)That must have been amazing to see. She is an inspiration to us all.
allegorical oracle
(6,599 posts)greatest pipes ever. And Kristofferson was a fabulous composer who was often overlooked.
Response to sheshe2 (Original post)
deurbano This message was self-deleted by its author.
Talitha
(8,166 posts)For everything. Thank you.
Figarosmom
(13,560 posts)tavernier
(14,522 posts)But Im still singing and protesting and carrying on. Its not over,
And so say my kids and grandkids.
To keep going up to 85 is amazing. Hope I can do that.
calimary
(90,893 posts)Youve been such an inspiration over the years!
And youre only retiring. That means youre still here! I take great comfort in that.
KT2000
(22,228 posts)that did it. The hard work - and she did work hard - and now watching those successes being dismantled. Her heart is broken. I am sad about this.
So many gave so much back when it was cool to be better people instead of the garbage dwellers we are surrounded by now.
SheltieLover
(81,819 posts)CousinIT
(12,770 posts)
.I want to wrap in bubble wrap and put her on a high shelf so I can keep her safe forever. Of course no one lives that long.
Here she is singing Nasty Man. You can guess who its about. Shes a jewel of a human being.
mountain grammy
(29,242 posts)it started to rain while the Paul Butterfield band was playing and they were plugged in so they had to stop..
Joan came out and did a couple of songs, no power.. acoustic guitar and her voice. She's a small woman and she was dancing around the stage soaking wet. We had seats when she played. We watched Dylan from the parking lot.
MerryBlooms
(12,415 posts)I just listened to 4 songs... Be well, shining light.
DinahMoeHum
(23,691 posts)in Madison Square Garden,NY; leading the audience in "Jacob's Ladder"
Before that, I saw her in 2009 at the 50th anniversary of the Newport Folk Festival.
She did "Diamonds And Rust" as a duet with Judy Collins.
Her performance had me feel like my feet were firmly screwed to the ground and my skin prickled with goose bumps.
Devilsun
(389 posts)chowmama
(1,119 posts)mnhtnbb
(33,511 posts)when we joined a cruise in 2012 sponsored by The Nation magazine. She performed at a private concert for the group one night, and allowed us to take photos before she started singing.

Another evening, a reception was held in her honor and we got to chat with her a bit. Both she and my husband grew up in Palo Alto.
Amazing woman with a unique voice.
OldBaldy1701E
(11,593 posts)Yes.
Too bad we decided to squander that era.
That is the part that really sucks as far as I am concerned.
surfered
(14,379 posts)ihaveaquestion
(4,814 posts)You beat me to the posting of it
Thanks!
GiqueCee
(4,790 posts)... and her sister, Mimi, was married to Richard Fariña, a songwriter and author who died tragically in a motorcycle accident on the night of a party celebrating the publication of his book, Been Down So Long It Looks Like Up To Me. Mimi played autoharp to Richard's guitar, and one of their better known songs was Pack Up Your Sorrows.
heckles65
(633 posts)and well done
Wild blueberry
(8,376 posts)And thank you, DUers who posted so many gorgeous songs.
Thank you.
Martin68
(28,091 posts)Dr. Shepper
(3,239 posts)Went with my mom in the late 80s. Love her.
mjvpi
(1,939 posts)La Coliniere
(2,000 posts)Loved her version of Mary Chapin Carpenters Stones in the Road. She was one of the first woke artists who inspired me as a kid in the late 60s.