Look, Kids, Now He’s De-Composing
I am as eager as the next person to speak in highly idealized terms about arts education and bringing the beauty of Mozart into the life of every child. But . . . The unspoken reality is that most musicians have a certain feeling of dread about playing what are affectionately (or maybe not so affectionately) referred to as “Kiddie Koncerts.”
Everyone wants the kids to have fun, and carry away with them a lasting impression that orchestras are fabulous and wonderful, but the thing is, being in the audience for a symphony concert by definition requires sitting very still and making no sound for an hour or more at a time. For children, having to sit so still for so long a time can actually be psychologically painful. In many households, it is used as a form of punishment. Everyone always has the best of intentions, but in their standard form, symphony concerts and children are not always the best combination. Like many other aspects of musical performance, if one does not respect the inherent difficulty, the whole thing can blow up in your face.
I played a lot of children’s concerts in my playing days. Some of them were very very good. But I am shocked, shocked, to have to report that others . . . were not. Part of the problem is, the typical symphony orchestra just isn’t in that line of work, and the economics of the average small orchestra orchestra concert being what they are, there is usually little or no money in the budget to do a big visually-engaging event for a concert hall filled with bussed-in school children. So out of sheer financial necessity, some of the orchestras I played in would just do a one-hour version of an adult concert, with the assistant conductor giving a little lecture on some fine musicological point. The players would always just try to get through it while ignoring the buzz of distracted noise in the crowd, and everyone would just hope that the audience was somehow, despite their general lack of interest, soaking up a cultural experience. Of course, with kids, anything can happen, and sometimes things went way beyond the worst of our expectations.
There was one time we were going to do a kiddie concert at the Boston Ballet. We were in the Wang Center, and so we had 5,000 high school kids in the seats. For every hundred kids there was maybe one teacher on guard duty—whatever it was, it wasn’t enough. It was during the school day, so attendance was mandatory for everyone, and for this audience we were going to perform the entire Sleeping Beauty ballet. Three hours. No lecture. No changes from the regular show. Here goes.
Well, other than the usual drone of chit chat in the audience, this went along okay for the first act. But then, at intermission, someone in management decided to make a little extra money by opening the concession stand to all these kids. Not necessarily a bad idea, but the trouble was, when the audience came back for Act II, they were all armed with M&M’s. Eventually, some whiz kid in a box seat way up in the second balcony by the proscenium made the necessary trigonometric calculations, and he managed to land an M&M right on top of the tympani heads in the orchestra pit. Encouraged by this small success, more followed; with their sugar-coated mass multiplied by their gravity-induced velocity, each M&M made a very satisfying “boing” noise with every accurate hit. Once the kids had the range, they fired for effect. Down they came. Boing, boing, boing. These misshapen confections bounced in every direction, including up on the stage. With green, red and brown quasi-ball-bearings all over the stage, you never saw ballet dancers look so terrified.
Fortunately, the mind tends to block out truly unpleasant memories, so I don’t remember a lot of the less-than-stellar children’s concerts I played. But there is one I cannot forget—it was so traumatic I can never get it out of my mind.
We were playing in one of those old, all-purpose civic-center war memorial auditoriums, better used for wrestling matches. It had a big overhanging balcony all around, and the orchestra wasn’t on the stage, we were out in the center of the floor. This meant we were completely surrounded; there was nowhere to retreat in case of a massive frontal assault.
The conductor had come up with a real toe-tapping theme for this concert: it was called “Minuets Through the Ages.” (No, I am not kidding.) We proceeded to play various Haydn and Mozart minuets, and in between each one, this conductor would turn around to these 8,000 hormone-soaked seventh graders and give them a little lecture on some obscure point of musical form and composition in the 18th century regarding 3/4 time.
Well, you would think that somehow, somewhere, somebody would have taken a look at this idea and realized that this would not hold the attention of a bunch of screaming seventh graders for 60 minutes, but . . . they didn’t. So we started to play, and this guy would occasionally turn around and try to talk over the rumble. Not surprisingly, the kids became more and more hostile as the show went on. About halfway through, we completely lost them. We could barely hear ourselves playing over the talking. And, since the kids held the high ground of the balcony, we were pretty much doomed from the get-go. At one point, spitballs made out of the printed programs started to come raining down in a blizzard, and that continued to the end of the show. Thank goodness they lacked heavier caliber ammunition. In retrospect, I consider myself lucky to have gotten out of there alive.
Whenever I played a less-than-wonderful kiddie concert, it always bothered me for a more practical reason: deep in my narcissistic heart, I knew that my future livelihood as a musician was highly dependent upon effective audience development, and I hated to see opportunities to achieve that goal go to waste.
That thought was lurking in the back of my mind when one fateful day I was playing yet another kiddie koncert. This one included a lot of kids on stage dancing, so we figured all right, at least there’s something to look at, this should hold the kids’ attention. But alas, the story was not terribly interesting, and eventually everyone, including the orchestra, just about fell asleep. That was bad enough, but in the middle of the show (and no, I am not making this up), six little kids came out carrying a stretcher with a body on it. Turns out they were supposed to be the pall bearers at Mozart’s funeral.
I’m all for grand dramatic effects whenever appropriate, but gee whiz . . . Mozart’s corpse? In a show designed for five year olds? I thought it was a bit much.
After playing this show about six times, I finally went up to the people producing the event and expressed my dismay. “Mozart’s corpse?” I said. “Come on, guys. Surely you could do better than that. I mean, I’m just a lowly bass player, and even I could come up with something better than that.”
“Well,” they replied, “keeping kids focused is hard. You’re so smart, let’s see you do it.”
So I went home and pondered this little gauntlet thrown down at my creativity. The challenge was to create a 60-minute show that, for budgetary reasons, could use no more than four actors. It had to use music from the standard (public domain) orchestra literature. And it had to work for all age groups—including 3, 5, 7, and 13-year olds, as well as their parents. And it had to actually teach something about music. Yikes.
I thought about this for quite a while. One night I was trying to come up with some kind of comedic court case based on one of the classic fairy tales, when I just blurted out the phrase, “Peter VS. the Wolf.” At last, the Wolf would have his day in court. This might work.
As part of my research, I sat down with a lawyer and told him the original story of Peter and the Wolf. The first thing he said was, “Well, it’s obvious the Wolf was denied due process,” and we were off and running. The result was a courtroom comedy based on the characters and events of the original Prokofiev story. The musicians would each be called to the stand to be cross-examined by the Wolf, and all of the instruments would be demonstrated and explained in the process.
This show was a remarkable success at its premiere. Amazingly, it worked for kids of all ages, and their parents.
Once Peter VS. the Wolf was produced in Massachusetts, I wondered if anyone else would want to do it. And maybe pay me money for the use of it? So I sent a few flyers around. Imagine my shock when the Phoenix Symphony scheduled it!
That was the beginning of a remarkable series of events. Some unknown musician who played the show in one distant city would call their cousin in another city to tell them about it, and bit by bit I started to get calls from orchestra managers from all over, asking about it and wanting to perform it.
This went on for several years, until one fine day I received an email from someone in, of all places, Brazil. They told me they wished to perform my “Pedro Versus O Lobo.” They went on to say they were going to perform it in the “municipal theater” of Rio de Janeiro. Well I must admit, this didn’t sound very classy– I had this vision of the local “municipal theater” as being one of those multi-purpose cinder block facilities with kids making ash trays at one end and a basketball hoop at the other. But Rio is Rio, so I asked them, “Well, would you be willing to fly me down and put me up?” “Sure,” they said.
Well, ash trays and basketball hoops or no, a free trip to Rio is nothing to sneeze at, so off I went. At one point I started to wonder if this would turn out to be one of those Nigerian email scams, but I had grown up listening to Antonio Carlos Jobim and Joao Gilberto singing about girls from Ipanema, and my curiosity was too much, so I took the chance.
Well . . . it turns out the “municipal theater,” or if we were to use its full name in Portuguese, O Theatro Municipal do Rio de Janeiro, is more or less the Carnegie Hall of South America. The entire building was imported from Europe back at the height of the rubber boom, it’s loosely copied from the Paris Opera House, and it is one of the most beautiful edifices anywhere. The sets and costumes of the production rivaled those of a Broadway show, and local heartthrob soap opera TV stars were cast in the leading roles. There were 12 sold-out performances, and they put me up in a five-star hotel right on the beach.
So there I was, day three of this fabulous week in Rio. I was sitting on Ipanema Beach, watching the garotas de Ipanema walking by, with a cold coconut in one hand a caipirinha in another. I was trying to grasp just how the stars had aligned themselves in such a manner as to bring me to such a heavenly place. I mean, traveling the world to exotic locales is fun enough . . . but to see something of your own being magnificently staged and performed for appreciative audiences, my goodness. It’s one of the biggest thrills anyone could ask for.
And all at once, it came to me:
I owed it all . . . to Mozart’s corpse.
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Excerpt from Real Men Don’t Rehearse
© 2009 Justin Locke
(Justin Locke’s unique family concert programs have been performed on four continents and two island nations, in six languages. To read the complete scripts or to see sample videos, please visit www.justinlocke.com.
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