Photo: Jim Zacks
Flutist Richard Sherman
has found the secret recipe for improving the concert experience for modern
classical music lovers. Begin with alcohol, add a dab of discussion, chose the
best musicians available, avoid stuffiness and throw in a dollop of education.
Sherman’s Absolute Music
Chamber Series started out giving small chamber concerts in the Absolute Art Gallery
in Lansing’s Old Town. He wanted to re-create the audience friendly environment
that he’s been enjoying at the Chautauqua Institution during the summers in New
York State for the last 25 years.
In the beginning, in 2009,
the setting was charming, but the acoustics were not perfect and the setting
was cramped.
A few years later they retained
the Absolute name but changed location and moved a block down the street. They now perform at the Urban Beat Event
Center – a hip looking place with exposed old brick walls, a small bar and tons
of character.
Sherman has succeeded in
creating an environment for music making and music listening that hits the
mark, and almost every Absolute Music Chamber concert is a sellout.
At the center of
everything is Rick Sherman himself. He’s
full of energy and a love of music. He plays in several of the concerts and the
audience is drawn to his charisma and superb musicianship. The Absolute
audiences have become a Sherman fan club.
The format for the
concerts works like a charm. Here’s how a typical Absolute concert goes:
The evening begins with an
open cash bar serving beer and wine.
Everyone relaxes with a drink or two and since the majority of Absolute
attendees are regulars, the pre-concert experience is like a bunch of old
friends having a party.
The venue holds about 100
folding chairs which are set up in a semi-circle. The acoustics are good and there is
amplification for various announcements.
Every concert has a
“Concert Guide” (WKAR’s Jamie Paisley) who provides an informative and
entertaining introduction to the event’s selections.
Then the music begins. Through the years, Sherman has cultivated
performances with lots of variety and quality.
He gets his musicians mostly from the MSU College of Music – faculty and
graduate students. Chamber music is a category
that only defines the size of the ensemble – small – not the style of the music.
It can include piano, winds, strings, percussion, singers, or any combination that
is required.
Last year the audience was
thrilled with a virtuoso marimba solo (Gwendolyn Dease) and this year Sherman
featured himself along with a jazz trio in performing the pop-infused Claude
Bolling “Suite for Flute and Jazz Piano”. Since Rodney Whitaker’s jazz trio was
there for the Suite, they also filled up a hole in the program with three jazz standards.
Anything goes!
Things are relaxed and
casual and the audience sits close to the musicians so they can feel part
of the performance. Also, the listeners can bring their drinks to their seats, sipping wine as they’re enjoying the music.
During intermission,
everyone lines up near the bar to pile up a plate of complimentary hot
appetizers (the meatballs get the best reviews). Eating and more socializing and
drinking. What can be bad?
When the concert ends, the
musicians sit in front of their adoring crowd for a lively Q and A. Facilitated by Paisley, the mic is passed
around and the classical music lovers get to ask about everything they ever
wanted to know about classical music and the lives of professional musicians.
Chamber music was
originally written to be performed in a large living room inside a private home,
not large concert halls. Here, Absolute
comes close to that model. Audiences have an experience that is social,
educational, and musical. And it takes
place in an intimate space that brings the audience closer to the music and the
musicians.
For more information,
check out www.absolutemusiclansing.org.
1 comment:
Thanks, Ken, for your description of the Absolute Music concert series. Like you, we have found the concerts uniformly wonderful. The series is a treasure for the community. Two minor corrections. The first is that Jamie Paisely is not the only concert guide; Jody Knol also frequently fills that role. And the other correction is that the legendary meatballs (and other snacks) are available at the END of the concert, not during intermission, although the bar is open from beginning to end. Rose and Jim Zacks
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