basket house
See also: baskethouse and basket-house
English
editAlternative forms
editPronunciation
editAudio (General Australian): (file)
Noun
editbasket house (plural basket houses)
- (idiomatic) A cafe or similar establishment where musical performances are given and the performers are then paid with money placed in a basket by members of the audience.
- 1964 August 12, “Beatniks After More Bread”, in Eugene Register-Guard, retrieved 8 Aug. 2011:
- Like a union is what some bearded beatniks and long-tressed girls are trying to form at Greenwich Village "Basket Houses." "Basket Houses" are coffee houses where they pass the basket to collect tips for the entertainers, who are not on the payroll.
- 1969 January 9, “The Scene That Ended”, in Village Voice, retrieved 8 Aug. 2011, page 55:
- Next month the Four Winds, an old cafe and the last basket house in the Village, will close to make way for a dress shop.
- 1969 April 10, “Riffs”, in Village Voice, retrieved 8 Aug. 2011, page 42:
- Vince Martin showed up, Bob Gibson was expected, and all of a sudden the rogue's gallery of remember whens from the basket house days were all there.
- 2010 September 9, Sean Wilentz, “Excerpt: ‘Bob Dylan in America’”, in New York Times, retrieved 8 Aug. 2011:
- Unlike many of the other clubs, it was not a so-called basket house, where walk-on performers of widely ranging competence earned only what they managed to collect in a basket they passed around the audience.
Usage notes
edit- Used especially with reference to establishments found in Greenwich Village, New York City during the 1950s and 1960s.