
Jillith Fair – Loving Jill Sobule

A night celebrating the life and music of our friend, Jill, hosted by Jim Boggia and Marykate O’Neil.
Tickets $20 online, $25 at the door
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Tickets for good, not greed
100% of profits from your small booking fee helps fund charities providing education, healthcare and basic necessities to humans across the globe!
10% off Taqueria Cresta with your Fallser Club ticket!!
Performers:
- Tracy Bonham
- Jonathan Coulton
- Dave Derby
- Jacob Lawson
- James Mastro
- Tammy Faye Starlight
- David Weisberg
“Jill Sobule can claim her place among the stellar New York singer-songwriters of the last decade. Topical, funny and more than a little poignant …grown-up music for an adolescent age.” – The New York Times
When Jill performed at the Fallser Club in 2024, our Executive Director Ashana Larsen had the chance to sit down and talk with her about her amazing career, changing the world, losing things, and gaining ourselves. Take a listen to the podcast episode below. (This was recorded while she was packing up for her next show so there is a bit of background noise, but still such a Jill gem that is worth a listen!)
Jim Boggia
For more than 20 years, Jim Boggia has been winning over fans, critics, contemporaries and luminaries alike with his uncompromising devotion to the sort of winsomely nostalgic, emotionally direct songcraft that’s impervious to age. His sonically intelligent retro-pop manifesto informs three studio albums—2001’s Fidelity Is the Enemy, 2005’s Safe in Sound and 2008’s Misadventures in Stereo—and he’s worked with a startling array of artists, including Aimee Mann, Juliana Hatfield, Mike Viola, Tracy Bonham, Bernadette Peters, David Poe, NRBQ’s Big Al Anderson, famed Beach Boys lyricist Tony Asher, MC5 guitarist Wayne Kramer, Attractions drummer Pete Thomas, esteemed ’70s pop misfit Emitt Rhodes, and Canadian songstress Amanda Marshall. Also an accomplished singer and guitarist, Boggia performs with the well-known New York City-based Beatles tribute band, the Fab Faux, as well as Mad Dogs & Dominos, an 18-piece collective headed by a heavyweight roster that includes Blues Brothers alum Lou Marini and producer John Leventhal. Oh, and he plays a mean ukulele.
https://www.jimboggiamusic.com/
https://jimboggia.bandcamp.com/
https://open.spotify.com/search/jim%20boggia
@jimboggia
Marykate O’Neil

Multi-media artist, Marykate O’Neil, has released six albums, a few cassettes, and a couple of .45’s. Her music has been played on the radio, internets and has been featured in movies and television. Marykate has performed throughout the U.S. and Europe to big festival crowds and to empty seats in darkened basements. Her paintings are exhibited throughout NYC’s galleries and are held in private and University collections.
Marykate’s music has been described as — Elvis Costello meets Astrud Gilberto; a female George Harrison; a happy Aimee Mann; a folk Bjork; a Capote-esque storyteller; and most frequently like herself. The Boston Globe might have said it best (or at least the funniest) when they said: “O’Neil’s literate lyrics feature the sort of off-kilter insights Emily Dickinson might make if alive today. After listening to commercial radio, hearing O’Neil sing is like reading Sylvia Path’s brutally honest poetry in the wake of watching “American Idol”.
Tracy Bonham
Two time GRAMMY® nominee Tracy Bonham is a classically trained violinist, pianist, and vocalist turned alt-rock singer-songwriter.
Tammy Faye Starlight
Tammy Faye Starlight is the stage name for T. D. Lang, an NYC-based performance artist, cabaret singer, and actress known for her satirical character work and original songs. Her most famous persona, Tammy Faye Starlight, is a fictional right-wing country singer who debuted in 1996. Starlight also performs as other historical figures, such as the late Velvet Underground singer Nico, and Israeli pop star Tamar. She is celebrated for her razor-sharp wit, ability to blend humor with tragedy, and for bringing forgotten or marginalized figures to life on stage.
James Mastro
James Mastro – guitarist, multi-instrumentalist, producer, and acclaimed singer-songwriter – has toured the world with rock and pop icons including Patti Smith, Ian Hunter, Judy Collins, John Cale, The Jayhawks, Alejandro Escovedo, Garland Jeffreys, and Jesse Malin, even serving as musical director for Robert Plant. Known for his inventive, emotive playing — channeling the spirit of David Bowie and Mick Ronson — Mastro steps firmly into the spotlight with his MPress Records release, Dawn of a New Error.
The album’s 10 tracks balance twangy Americana with art-rock edge, showcasing Mastro’s sharp songwriting, textural guitar work, and hook-filled melodies. Produced by Tony Shanahan and mixed by Grammy nominee James Frazee, the record features appearances by Ian Hunter and a lineup of powerhouse drummers. Highlights include the anthemic opener “Right Words, Wrong Song,” the introspective “My God,” and the gospel-tinged “Someday Someone Will Turn Your Head Around.”
A fixture of the New York music scene since his teens, Mastro began playing CBGB’s and Max’s Kansas City at 16, joined Richard Lloyd’s band by 17, and later helped launch the Hoboken sound with The Bongos. In the ’90s, he fronted alt-country favorites The Health & Happiness Show before becoming a longtime collaborator with Ian Hunter and contributing to projects by Jill Sobule, Phoebe Snow, and The Feelies.
Dawn of a New Error affirms Mastro’s place as one of America’s most versatile and passionate rock artists — a lifelong fan who never stopped sneaking onto the stage.
Johathan Coulton
Jonathan Coulton is a singer-songwriter and cult favorite known for witty, emotionally resonant songs that bridge geek culture, storytelling, and pop craftsmanship. A former software coder, he found his creative calling in the early 2000s, inspired by the rise of Creative Commons and the DIY possibilities of the internet. In 2005, he quit his day job and launched Thing-A-Week, releasing a new song every week and building a devoted online audience that helped redefine how independent musicians connect with fans.
Blending humor and heart, Coulton’s songs often explore big ideas through offbeat characters—resentful teen nerds, lonely supervillains, even singing shop vacs—while touching on deeper themes of identity, connection, and technology. Over the years, he’s evolved from acoustic storyteller to ambitious conceptualist, collaborating with artists like John Flansburgh (Artificial Heart) and experimenting with new sonic landscapes.
His concept album Solid State (with a companion graphic novel by Matt Fraction and Albert Monteys) is a meditation on how the internet has transformed from utopian promise to digital dystopia. Mixing rock-opera ambition with electronic experimentation, it explores themes of surveillance, identity, connection, and apocalypse—told from both human and machine perspectives. Songs like “All This Time,” “Brave,” and “Don’t Feed the Trolls” probe our fractured online culture, while “Ball and Chain” and “Tattoo” tackle intimacy and permanence in a changing world.
Coulton continues to push the boundaries of songwriting, using humor, empathy, and sharp observation to illuminate the complicated relationships between technology, humanity, and hope.
https://www.jonathancoulton.com/
By Car or By Train
The East Falls Train Station is a short walk from the Fallser Club. Parking in East Falls is no problem! There is ample free on-street parking near the East Falls train station driveway at 3610 Midvale Ave and a paid municipal lot three blocks away at 4100 Ridge Ave. Midvale Ave and Ridge Ave are both well-lit!