As you can see in the picture above, he was not always sitting down, but he sat and listened, truly captivated, for a surprising majority of this kids-length concert. Mostly, when he stood up and walked to the end of our row, it was to get a good look at percussionist Joseph Connell, who at one point led the audience, in three parts, in the creation of an African polyrhythm. The players, led by violinist Glenn Donnellan, are all regulars with the National Symphony, and they led us through several explanations of what rhythm is and where it comes from. We were seated on the right side of the house, which had a good and well-behaved crowd but was not full to capacity, so Mini-Critic had the clearest view of Richard Barber and the 17th-century double bass he used to imitate the regular pulse of a heartbeat at the opening of the concert. These explanations of rhythmic sounds in the natural world led into brief excerpts of famous pieces arranged for the quintet: heartbeat (Bizet's "Habanera" from Carmen); walking; bird song (second movement of Beethoven's Pastoral Symphony); and so on.
For my part, I thought that this concert was excellent for kids. Having suffered through one of the Sesame Street live shows for kids (which Mini-Critic enjoyed because his then-idol, Elmo, was the star), I was so happy that in this concert children were hearing real classical music, all nice selections in suitable arrangements in terms of length, played on real instruments by real musicians. It was a nice mixture of commentary and playing, since the older kids in the audience seemed not to get as antsy during the spoken explanations. As a musicologist, I wanted to leap in with helpful footnotes at some points. For example, when Glenn Donnellan asked us to identify how many birds we heard in the Pastoral Symphony excerpt, he had the players play each of the three melodies separately but only labelled the last one as the cuckoo, saying that you could "look up what the other two were." (Just for the record, Beethoven identified them in the second movement's coda as Nachtigall, Wachtel, und Kuckuck, or nightingale, quail, and cuckoo. When I explained that to Mini-Critic, he nodded politely and craned his head around me to see Edward Cabarga, on the clarinet, and Adel Sanchez, on the trumpet, so I guess Donnellan's instincts were on target for the audience.)
This was the last of the concerts in the NSO Family Programs series this season. Nothing about the new season has been released yet, except for a notice on the first performance, an NSO Family Concert called Stories in Music, scheduled for Sunday, November 20, at 1 pm and again at 3 pm. The Family Concerts feature the full orchestra in the Concert Hall, in this case with Leonard Slatkin conducting, but are generally about one hour long. The Kinderkonzerts are in the smaller Theater Lab, with a smaller group of musicians and shorter musical excerpts.
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