In addition to the beautiful afternoon of 15-minute "micro concerts" curated by the Newport String Project, a number of other organizations have tried over the past year of Covid restrictions to experiment with maintaining a sense of connection with their audience through live music-making. I'll list a few examples that I'm aware of, and I'm sure that there are many more. Will any of these experiments continue, learn from each other, iterate, become mainstreamed as standard practice? 1:1 concerts, curated by Silkroad in collaboration with BAM 1:1 concerts by members of the San Francisco Symphony two/go by the Resident Musicians of musiConnects Musical Conversations by Emmanuel Music roster members 1:1 concerts, first launched in Stuttgart, with a creative team that includes flutist Stephanie Winker
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2018 Brown University graduate Melanie Ambler has spent much of 2020 developing her own project, Petite Pause Musicale, to reach people in isolation, both in the United States and in France (where she traveled on a Fulbright). I love how she describes her professional goals in her LinkedIn profile: "I am a cellist pursuing a career in medicine as a physician-artist-scientist. My work centers around how music can be used as an effective, non-pharmacological, cost-effective complement to medical care."
Vanity Fair published a very lovely interview with Stephen Colbert recently, including his thoughts on performing comedy in front of a camera at home without his normal audience of happy people in a theater. In particular, I appreciated the following paragraph about reclaiming a sense of intimacy.
I discovered that someone posted thirty seconds of one of my backyard performances. I suspect that if I participated in social media, I might find a few more. Already nostalgic for interacting with neighbors and friends (new as well as old) through outdoor concerts. |
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June 2022
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