
Peter Krasinski is at it again- Silent Movie with LIVE Organ Accompaniment!

An exploration of the Villancicos and Xacaras in the 16th and 17th centuries from Spain and the New World (Mexico and Guatemala). Works by Juan del Encina, Juan de Araujo, Fray Francisco de Santiago and Rafael Antonio Castellanos.
James Dargan, voice and violin; Teri Kowiak, voice; Dan Meyers, recorders and percussion; Camila Parias, voice; Zoe Weiss, viola da gamba; Salomé Sandoval, voice, baroque guitar and direction.
Monday, June 13th 4:00PM
Beacon Hill Friends House
6 Chestnut St
Boston, MA 02108-3624
$10 donation
More info at www.elfuegofire.com
I got to hear the preview concert this past week and it was excellent. If you’re in the neighborhood or if you’ve got some free time please come by and hear this concert, it is outstanding. I’ll be working the door so come and say hello to me as well.
~Kelly
If you’re looking for something fun to do this Thursday and you’d prefer it to be something that goes toward a good cause and involves chocolate, I have the right event for you.

My friend, Peter Krasinski, will play live accompaniment, which will be entirely improvised on the fly, to the silent film Speedy starring Harold Lloyd. There will be a champagne and chocolate tasting before the film and the proceeds of the evening will benefit the Episcopal Relief and Development Japan Earthquake Fund. All tickets will be sold at the door so if you’re interested in going make sure to get there before 7:00pm.
For more details you can visit the church website or you can leave a comment here.
Thanks!
Kelly & Geoff
Last night I was lucky enough to attend one of the final open rehearsals of Berlioz’s Roméo et Juliette conducted by Maestro Charles Dutoit. In all the years I have lived here I have never been to a BSO open rehearsal. Now I know why.
My gripes, listed below, have absolutely nothing to do with the performers. Indeed, I was quite taken with the tenor, Jean-Paul Fouchécourt. His performance was outstanding and clearly the best of the three vocal soloists. Watching Dutoit work was lovely and, in all likelihood, far more fun from the perspective of a working professional performer than seeing him in concert, though I will have to wait to report back to you about that on another day.
However, what made the night almost unbearable were the patrons. Here, in no particular order, are the problems that made me and my friend want to throttle the other people in the audience.
1) Dress. You’re going to the symphony, gentlemen, even if it is “only” a rehearsal. If you’re wearing Tiva’s, NAOT, or anything else that shows your toenails (which clearly haven’t been cut since the Nixon administration) you’re doing it wrong. Also, to the man with the feces stain on the outside of the seat of his pants? No, just no. The rest of our outfit was fine, how did you miss that? How did the woman you were with miss it?
2) CELL PHONES. Wow, where do I begin here. The BSO has for years projected that helpful slide up on the walls that reminds everyone, that means YOU, to please turn off your cell phones before the performance. This INCLUDES open rehearsals. When your cell phone rings during the pre-concert lecture the polite thing to do is to immediately TURN IT OFF. Letting it ring because you are too embarrassed to reach into your pocket makes you a bigger jerk. We all know it is you, lady in the white jacket. Furthermore, if it happens a second time then you are just a consummate entitled ass, or you’re too deaf to have a cell phone that isn’t permanently set to vibrate.
Also, a note to the person in the 3rd row, stage right, orchestra section. When the first violin section is pointing at you it’s time to TURN OFF YOUR RINGER.
3) Entitlement and Deafness. We all know that the Classical Music crowd is about 80 – 90% blue hairs. This is pretty much a fact of life. What is NOT, however, is that they act like entitled pissy socialites wherever they go. To the two 70+ year old ladies who came in during the pre-concert lecture and proceeded to have a very loud argument about where to sit, FAIL. There were seats literally everywhere. There were seats on the aisle. There were handicapped seats. You had your pick of seats that didn’t require climbing steps or moving very far. This was not rocket science. But, when you are talking AT each other so loudly that the entire orchestra section is shushing you because we can’t hear the lecturer, who was very interesting and engaging, you’re doing it wrong. It makes me wonder, when you’re that deaf, how much you’re going to actually hear of the experience, anyway. I mean, go ahead, enjoy yourself, but SHUT UP when other people are trying to listen.
4) Seats. Anyone who has ever been to Symphony Hall, even once, knows about the seats. The building is old (opened in 1900) and the seats are practically antiques. Unlike other concert halls, the seats are not spring loaded. There is a nice benefit to this, no squeaking when you sit down, no pressure from underneath when you sit, and no snapping shut when you stand up. However, there is one major downside. You have to actually set your seat down or it will fall down with a BANG. When the hall is largely empty, like it was for the lecture, this sounds roughly like a cannon blast. When the hall is full, like it was for the rehearsal, it sounds like a gun shot.
Now, imagine being on stage and trying to rehearse and hearing that over and over and over again. By the end of the rehearsal my friend and I were about to start throttling people, and we were in the audience. I literally hadn’t been to Symphony hall in years. She hadn’t been there in a while either, yet neither of us had a problem remembering to set out seats down quietly. Most of the people around us were clearly regulars. How hard is it to take an extra second and put your seat down quietly? I’m surprised nobody got skewered with a baton or a bow for knocking seats down, dropping off their coats, and then swaning about and chitchatting while Maestro Dutoit was on stage getting the orchestra to tune. Really??
5) The Audience as Furniture. The BSO has a lot of reasons for holding these open rehearsals. Off the top of my head here are a few: It’s good for audience building, the bar for entry is low ($17.00 for a ticket, not bad), it’s a great way to test drive a new piece that you might otherwise not want to pay full price for, it raises money for the BSO, and most importantly, the orchestra needs it.
That’s right, as a performer it is a completely different experience to play or sing in a space that is empty than it is to play or sing in one that is full of bodies. The acoustics, even in an “acoustically perfect” venue such as symphony hall, are different when the hall is full of warm bodies. That is just a truth of performing, it sounds different, the reverb is different. It IS different. So, guess what folks? We are there as furniture. We’re listening furniture, and for our pains, we get a cool pre-concert lecture wherein we get to learn about the piece, but our job is to sit there, SHUT UP, and listen. We’re there to help the orchestra so they have some practice with that piece in the space when it is full of people. This is especially helpful when you are dealing with a piece that is not in the standard repertoire, such as Berlioz’s Roméo et Juliette.
In summary, turn off your damn phones, shut up (you never know when he’s going to stop the rehearsal and you’ll get caught talking down there in the front row), dress appropriately, check your batteries in your hearing aids, and if you’re going to be a total tool, STAY HOME.
~Kelly
As some of you may know, I teach part time at the Museum of Science here in Boston. My excellent boss turned over the review of the St. John Passion concert to the PR department. Apparently they like to have little blurbs about employees to publish. They may be publishing something about the concert in an upcoming blurb somewhere. Stay tuned!
~Kelly
The review of the St. John Passion is up. I am absolutely THRILLED! Click here to read it and comment. Yay!!!!
~Kelly
Geoff here – Kelly and I managed to survive the very epic weekend, and what’s even better is that we actually had a pretty good time all around.
Kelly’s mom – Jo – arrived Thursday night and we picked her up from the airport. After I got off work on Friday we went out to dinner at the Fireplace. Jo had never been there, but she seemed to really like it. The food was pretty fantastic, as usual. I tried something different and got a special – hake. Boy, it was good. And Kevin, the awesome manager, actually donated some gift certificates to their “Fireside Chats” special events for us to sell at the auction. It was very cool of him. Stuff like that is why we like the place so much and are glad to have our rehearsal dinner there.
Saturday we had to split up as Kelly and Jo went off to do their own errands, and I had to run a bunch of my own before my police detail. The detail ended up being a lot of fun, as we got to meet the Red Sox mascot, Wally, the Green Monster. So I got his autograph for Kelly and then got some pictures with him. I will post those as soon as I can. After the detail was over, I ran home to shower and change and then the three of us went to the auction at our church. Kelly and I had contributed several items to the auction: a series of dog training lessons from Kelly; a few hours of IT tech support from me; and an entire home-cooked four course Portuguese dinner with table and dessert wines. So together Kelly and I raised over a thousand dollars with our donated items. It turns out that the family who bought the dinner from me is pretty interesting – the husband was the auctioneer for the church, and his wife is the one who kept bidding on the dinner. I am looking forward to making them dinner.
Kelly has already talked about the concert, but I wanted to throw in my two cents worth. I had a slightly different perspective, since I was running around at the front tables and doors while Kelly was running around inside and then performing. We were quite pleasantly surprised when people kept showing up, even after the concert had started. I think the last ticket I sold was at around 4:15, well over an hour after the concert started. But people seemed to really enjoy it, and the reception afterward was a lot of fun too. I got to watch one of the Deputy Superintendents talk with our landlord, who it turns out was in the CAPD himself from the late 1940s to the early 1960s. Apparently they knew a lot of the same people. And this couple from our church had nothing but praises for all of the help that they got from the officers on the detail. So although we were pretty exhausted by the time we got home Sunday night, we were quite happy that everything had gone so well and everyone had such a good time.
I don’t even know where to begin, but I owe a lot of people a lot of thanks. Today was the St. John Passion concert that I feel like I’ve been preparing for for months. In fact, it felt like the least of my duties was nailing my aria. I was coordinating with the St. Paul Adult Choir (SPAC), I was running everything relating to the Front of House, I was marketing my fool head off, arranging for flowers with the florist, proofreading the program book, the list just goes on. It feels like this has been a really long process and now that it is over, I feel awesome.
Was the performance flawless? No. Live performances never are, which is something that we, as a CD listening society of studio perfected work have come to forget. Was it spectacular? Yes. Do I feel like I left the best version of my aria in the room for the concert? Absolutely.
As a concert manager did I learn something from this? Oh HELL yes. Did everything I organized run perfectly? Of course not, it never does and it never will, such is human nature. But that is ok, there were no catastrophes, no major fires, and everyone seemed pleased. I can absolutely live with that.
So, in no particular order, to the Cambridge Auxiliary Police Department officers on our detail, to our crack Ushering Corps, to the Stage Crew, to the women of SPAC who helped coordinate everything with me between the two groups, to John, Jim, and most especially Jennifer, from the bottom of my heart, thank you. The words seem inadequate, but there they are.
To our fabulous and supportive landlord Marvin who came out to hear this concert when I am sure there were a 1,000 other things he could have been doing and for being so generous as to take us out to dinner afterward. Thank you, sir. You are a true gentleman.
To Amanda, Leigh, Mackie, Donna, and every single member of COOS who braved Harvard Square parking to come out for this concert, and to my Mother and Liza who braved the TSA for this concert. I thank you. You have no idea how much it meant for me to see friendly faces in the audience.
And to my betrothed, my darling, Geoff, who was the Head Usher, the liaison with the CAPD, who worked his behind off all day and way above and beyond the call of duty. I cannot tell you how much it means to me to know that you’ve got my back. Thank you and I love you.
Till next time,
~Kelly