Cambridge, Massachusetts

Everything Cambridge is known for

18 songs mention this city 106 artists from here

Cambridge, Massachusetts, a city renowned for its universities like Harvard and MIT, also has a notable musical identity. With 106 artists calling it home and 18 songs mentioning it in our collection, Cambridge has fostered a diverse range of musical talent. Jazz legend Johnny Hodges is from Cambridge, and the city is also mentioned in "Blinded by the Light" by Bruce Springsteen.

Music in Cambridge

Songs About Cambridge

Boston
Patty Griffin
97%
"Walked around Harvard Square"
The Pessimist
Wale
93%
"Couldn't get to Harvard, hard work, he hard whipped"
Whateva Will Be
A Tribe Called Quest
20%
"at Stanford or Harvard"
SLR 2
Lupe Fiasco
20%
"go to Harvard to be a Lupe stan"
Crew Love
Drake
7%
"I guess we'll never know where Harvard gets us"
Swing
Trace Adkins
6%
"Why yes I went to Harvard"
Book of Rhymes
Nas
5%
"My people be projects or jail, never Harvard or Yale..."
From Chaos
311
4%
"If dealing with punks was school I’d have a Harvard degree"
Jedi Code
Rapsody
4%
"Early morning talks with my boss deep at Cambridge week"
Blinded by the Light
Bruce Springsteen
3%
"Oh, some hazard from Harvard was skunked on beer, playin' backyard bombardier"
The Symbol
Action Bronson
3%
"My brain was sculpted at Harvard"
3%
"Got a girl in Harvard, I talk proper when I call her"
Believe Me
Lil Wayne
2%
"Waitin' for someone to test me like a Harvard nigga"
Do Better
Say Anything
2%
"Making Harvard graduates"
Stainless
Logic
2%
"Daddy graduated from Cambridge, yeah, money talks in every language, huh"
Truth Hurts (DaBaby Remix)
Lizzo
2%
"And I can have a bitch from Harvard with a eight-year degree"
Dedicate
Lil Wayne
2%
"If I taught you some shit, that's like Harvard, lil' bitch"
KMAG YOYO
Hayes Carll
1%
"MIT, PhD.'s, night & day, they're testing me"

Rivers & Roads in Song near Cambridge

Songs written about the waterways and highways that run near Cambridge.

History of Cambridge

Union Oyster House RoadyGoat

The Union Oyster House in Boston has been serving seafood since 1826, making it the oldest continuously operating restaurant in America. Daniel Webster used to drink a tall tumbler of brandy and water with each half-dozen oysters — and he'd eat several dozen. JFK's favorite booth on the second floor is marked with a plaque. The raw bar downstairs hasn't changed in nearly 200 years.

Mike's Pastry RoadyGoat

Mike's Pastry has anchored Boston's North End on Hanover Street since 1946. The cannoli — hand-filled to order so the shell stays crisp — sparked an ongoing rivalry with Modern Pastry across the street. The white box tied with string has become a symbol of Boston's Italian-American neighborhood. Tourists and locals alike argue about which side of the street has the better cannoli.

The Witch City That Outgrew Its Ghosts RoadyGoat

Salem carries the heaviest name in early American history: the 1692 witch trials. Here's the honest version, because the legend gets it wrong: about twenty people were executed, but none were burned at the stake. Nineteen were hanged, and one stubborn man, Giles Corey, was pressed to death under stones for refusing to enter a plea. The town that prosecuted those trials later produced the writer who wrestled with that guilt: Nathaniel Hawthorne, born in Salem in 1804, author of 'The Scarlet Letter' and 'The House of the Seven Gables' (the latter inspired by a real gabled mansion still standing here). Salem leaned into its dark fame and became one of America's great Halloween destinations, packing its streets every October. And quietly anchoring it all is the Peabody Essex Museum, rooted in a sea captains' society from 1799, often called the oldest continuously operating museum in the country.

15.0 mi away

Fenway Park

1912

Opened April 20, 1912, Fenway Park is the oldest active Major League Baseball stadium in the United States.

Boston Tea Party Ships & Museum

1773

On December 16, 1773, colonists disguised as Mohawk Indians dumped 342 chests of East India Company tea into Boston Harbor.

Harvard Yard

1636

Founded in 1636, Harvard is the oldest institution of higher learning in the United States, predating the country itself by 140 years.

Southworth & Hawes

Southworth & Hawes was an early photographic firm in Boston, 1843–1863. Its partners, Albert Sands Southworth (1811–1894) and Josiah Johnson Hawes (1808–1901), have been hailed as the first great Amer

Josiah Johnson Hawes

Josiah Johnson Hawes (1808–1901) was a photographer in Boston, Massachusetts. He and Albert Southworth established the photography studio of Southworth & Hawes, which produced numerous portraits of ex

Tremont Row

Tremont Row (1830s-1920s) in Boston, Massachusetts, was a short street that flourished in the 19th and early-20th centuries. It was located near the intersection of Court, Tremont, and Cambridge stree

Things to Do in Cambridge

Everything Near Cambridge

455 stories, landmarks & places within ~20 miles — the same local lore RoadyGoat plays as you drive through.

Explore Cambridge on the Map