Here Comes the Bride

This amusing little story was told to me by a bassist as we were waiting for a gig to begin last month. Hope you enjoy it!

Here Comes the Bride – careful what you ask for!
A colleague of mine got a call to play a wedding recently with a rather strange request. The bride wanted “Here Comes the Bride” played at the ceremony….but she specifically requested that the double bass play the melody!

“Uh, okay…” my colleague replied. “So you must have… played the bass in high school, then?”

“No,” said the bride.

“Uh…. okay…..”

It’s not that we bassists can’t play Here Comes the Bride, of course. But why the bass? It’s like having the tuba play revelry or taps at a military ceremony. Kind of cool but kind of… well…. unusual.

Practicing the part
Not wanting to screw up the melody and make a mockery out of this bride’s wedding, my colleague practiced the music thoroughly. How exactly does one want this melody to sound on the bass? Jazzy? Straight? Pizzicato? Arco?

He eventually decided to play it in a very straight ahead, almost march-like fashion.

Bridal Bow Bumps
This gig happened in a very cramped little chapel, and as my colleague set up for the ceremony, he noticed that he was practically standing in the aisle, right in the way of the wedding party’s procession. He scooted and scrunched back as far has he could, trying to minimize his intrusiveness.

Soon, the ceremony began, and my colleague began his rendition of Here Comes the Bride.

“Ba, buh, buh-buh….”

As the bride approached, it became clear (to the bassist, at least) that there was scant clearance between bride and bass. This was going to be tight!

The bride began to pass.

The bassist pulled a down bow, and managed to bow right into the bride’s posterior as she walked past, stopping the bass mid-phrase.

“Ba, buh, huh WHACK!”

Mortified, the bassist managed to start back up, finishing up the processional.Bride Gets Bumped.jpg

Moral of the story?
If you really want the bass player to play the melody for your “big day,” so be it…. just watch your butt as you pass him!

Bye Bye Basses

Hydraulic stages are both a blessing and a curse! I’ve played on them in a variety of venues, and while they’re usually a blessing for stage and pit logistics in multi-use halls, they can yield some amusing (and potentially disastrous) unintended results.

Up, down, up, down…
I have played performances with a variety of groups in Milwaukee’s Uihlein Hall over the years, but most of these performances have been with the Milwaukee Ballet. This hall has a hydraulic stage, which is raised for full symphonic performances and lowered in the front for ballet and opera performances.

For many years, this stage would do these funny little readjustments throughout the course for a concert, like a little earthquake under one’s chair. I recall many instances where I’d give a little start as I felt the stage quiver and readjust itself upward.

Guess what happened?
The Milwaukee Ballet Orchestra was playing a prickly modern piano concerto for a series several years ago, and the piano was down in the pit with us, nestled right up against the conductor’s podium. We were particularly cramped in the pit for that run (not that we ever have a ton of room down there–and we’re a small orchestra!).

One evening, mere seconds after the conductor had given the downbeat for the beginning of the first movement, the entire front half of the pit abruptly dropped about two inches. The other half of the orchestra was on a concrete surface behind the hydraulic pit and didn’t budge an inch.

Dropping a few inches down at the start of a difficult concerto is enough to throw anyone off, but to make matters worse, many musicians had their stands and chairs right on the crack between stage and concrete, causing utter pandemonium in the pit. Stands began tipping over, violinists looked like they were about to fall into each other like a row of dominoes, and a sudden panicky flurry of activity erupted as folks tried to readjust stands, pick up fallen music, and move their chairs onto flat surfaces.

Pandemonium in the pit
The conductor, eyes wide with surprise (probably thinking that his might downbeat had sent us all plummeting into the depths), kept conducting, and though much of the opening section of the concerto ended up featuring only piano (our soloist didn’t even flinch as the piano dropped those couple of inches–what a pro!) and the woodwinds that escaped the hairy plummet.

Nothing like the fear of an orchestra collectively falling to its death to rally the troops and get the blood pumping. The rest of the performance was full of energy and actually better than the rest of the run!

Down, down, down, down…
This slight stage burble (at an unfortunate time) is not the only time that this hydraulic stage has messed with a performance. I recall a popular story from Milwaukee Symphony folklore about this very stage (feel free to chime in with any corrections, Milwaukee Symphony folks–this is coming to me second or third hand).

Apparently, during the middle of a Milwaukee Symphony concert, the entire front section of the orchestra (including the conductor!) began to descend into the darkness below the stage. The orchestra members closest to the lip of the stage played on like musicians on the deck of the Titanic as they slowly sank underneath the stage, disappearing from audience view…

They’re throwing knives at us in the pit!

No matter how you cut it, pit musicians are an easy target for falling debris (whether confetti, props from the stage, or even singers sometimes!). After all, we are crammed shoulder to shoulder in a small dark space, with a stage full of (gasp!) singers emoting onstage without necessarily watching out for that pit.

Danger From Above
I was recently playing an opera performance where, out of the corner of my eye, I noticed something rolling quickly toward the lip of the pit. The musician next to me heard this same object and, with lightning reflexes, pulled herself under the lip of the stage, just as a giant knife fell into the pit right onto her chair, missing her by less than an inch.

This knife, while thankfully folded up (it was like a giant wooden switchblade), was a big heavy hunk of wood and metal that would have conked this musician on the head, back, or shoulder as it fell into the pit. Yikes!

At intermission, people from the balcony came down to the pit, convinced that this falling knife had smashed one of our instruments. The sound of the knife falling was audible from the balcony, and to them it sounded like it had solidly impacted something.

Ah, the perils of pit playing!

The Last Banana
A conductor recently shared an amusing story about a similar situation that occurred years ago at the New York City Opera. A staging of Prokofiev’s “The Love for Three Oranges” featured a whole bunch of paper mache fruit being thrown around onstage. Apparently, a whole lot of it ended up in the pit during the rehearsal process, with big painted apples and oranges sailing into the pit, bonking musicians and causing……well, a little frustration in the pit!

After being bonked repeatedly, the musicians requested that some alteration be made in this scene’s staging that wouldn’t involve big pieces of novelty fruit sailing into the pit. The action was moved further upstage, hopefully keeping the bouncing fruit as far away from the pit as possible.

All was proceeding smoothly when, all of a sudden, a big yellow paper mache banana got loose, bouncing end over end downstage….and directly into the pit.

Bonk!

The music instantly ceased from the pit–one could hear a pin drop. This was the last straw for the musicians. The stage director, furious that the music had stopped, ran up to the conductor, who turned around to explain the situation.

You can push musicians to a point, but there’s always a line that you had better not cross, and that big bouncing banana was apparently the last straw.

Flowers for Linda Eder

Ahhhh! Ahhhh!

My focus shattered, I looked up from my music and all around me. Where was that yelling coming from? We were just starting the second half of an orchestral pops concert in a vast arena-like theater out by the airport in metro Chicago, playing to a near-capacity crowd of fans.

The fabulous Broadway singer Linda Eder was headlining that evening, her awe-inspiring vocals hypnotizing the entire orchestra during rehearsal earlier that afternoon. I was having a blast listening to this great singer–what might be a real ho-hum concert with a different headliner promised to be a real treat with Linda’s superstar singing.

Just before the performance, an extremely intense-looking spectacled and clean-shaven man clutching a bouquet of flowers came up to me.

“Eeeh… uh, how do I find Leeeeenda?” he asked.

I was just a random bass player on this gig, and I had no idea where the soloist was, so I shrugged my shoulders and the intense man shuffled off, flowers in hand, head rotating as he scanned the backstage area for Linda Eder.

An hour later, trying to determine where that loud screaming was coming from, I looked out into the audience… there was the flower guy! He was waving his arms and shouting at the top of his lungs:

“Linda! Leeeeeeeeeenda! Aaah!”

He sounded like man who’d just been shot in the eye with a BB gun. It’s actually pretty strange to hear a man shriek like that. I remember a former roommate who always played some sort of military shooter video game. Every time he pegged an enemy, the computer emitted an unholy shriek–just like this guy!

This night was starting to get interesting!


This hooting and hollering continued for the entire performance, interrupting nearly every soft passage or finishing cadence. There were even moments during the middle of a piece where, during a tender spot in the music, this guy would scream at the top of his lungs.

“Aaaaaaaaaah! Leeeeeeenda! We love you, Leeeeenda!”

Now, I’m all for exuberant audience behavior–it’s definitely nice to know that your musical efforts are being appreciated. But this was the only guy making any sound at all, and his loud shrieks had that escaped mental patient quality to them that makes you wonder if he’s got anything besides flowers under his jacket.

More and more heads turned as this guy kept up his loud caterwauling. Linda even acknowledged him a couple of times between numbers, pointing out with some humor that he “sure had a set of pipes on him.” This, unfortunately, did nothing to pacify him–the attention only seemed to intensify his enthusiasm.

At one point, Linda called out, “Who here has seen me perform live before?”

Many people clapped enthusiastically in response to this, but Mr. Intenso also shrieked, “Five times, Linda! Five times!”

A vision of this guy tailing poor Linda Eder around the Midwest, marring all her performances with his misguided fandom, immediately sprang to mind. Like a comedian trying to deal with an overzealous heckler, Linda had probably been dealing with this guy for some time now–I somehow doubted that this was his first outburst.

The sad thing is, this guy probably was Linda’s biggest fan. He probably has all her albums, posters of her up everywhere, and has memorized every turn of phrase and stylistic nuance associated with Linda.


He kept up his loud hooting through the entire performance. I cringed with discomfort every time he started bellowing, and I could see my colleagues onstage doing the same thing with each outburst. Even the conductor started looking around, puzzled at all that racket. This guy’s pipes were perfect for hawking hot dogs at Wrigley Field a few miles down the road, but they were wildly inappropriate in the concert hall.

Where was the security? After all, this was Rosemont, Illinois, a historically notorious mob hangout. One figures that a place that as mobbed up as Rosemont (their bid for a casino was recently tabled due to the overwhelmingly obvious mob presence) would hire some guys that could “take care” of such situations.


Linda finally came out for her final song, and this guy rose up out of his seat and walked right up to the stage, brandishing a bouquet of flowers.

“Linda! Flowers!”

Linda walked out to the microphone to begin her last number.

“Linda! Linda! Flowers! Flowers! Flowers, Leeeeeeenda…..flowers! FLOWERS!”

Linda looked over and smiled at the guy (what a pro–I wonder what she was really thinking?).

That smile only added fuel to the fire.

“Flowers flowers flowers floooooowers, Linda!”

She came over.

She bent down.

She took the flowers.

The flower man beamed, as if an angel had suddenly descended from the heavens and come to him in a vision.

“Oh, Linda. We love you!”

A Week in the Life

Part 1 – locked out in the cold

You’ve just gotta love this profession. No matter how many roadblocks get tossed in their path, musicians always seem to find a way around them, taking things in stride and laughing about it later with each other over either coffee or beer (depending on the hour!). Whether it’s butchering the Messiah by whacking the transposition button on the organ, dropping bows and breaking into hysterics mid-concert, or finding oneself face-to-face with a leering colleague just as they are about to play a big solo, musicians are often only a hair’s breadth away from making fools of themselves in very public settings. As a result, we musicians are apt to take life’s inconveniences in stride and roll with the punches more often than other folks, making lemonade out of lemons on a regular basis.

I had a recent week of orchestral work that teetered on the brink between hilarity and disaster recently. It’s amazing how unforeseen circumstances can take an excellent pack of musicians (which this group most certainly was) and make them want to tear their hair out by the end of the experience.

But, being both a musician and a person who gets a kick out of borderline disaster situations, I couldn’t help but smile as the week unraveled, knowing that I’d have some great blog fodder for future weeks.

This is one of those tales that, just when you think the weirdness is over, continues to surprise you. I’ll spread this over a couple of posts, so expect more soon.

One quick note before I start–this is an excellent ensemble that I’m referencing, and the wackiness results strictly from unforeseen circumstances and never from musical shortcomings. In other words, I’m not ripping on the group in any way, shape, or form, simply pointing out the bizarre behind-the-scenes situations we musicians regularly encounter.


The week in question started with a Sunday morning rehearsal in a nondescript downtown Chicago office building on a blisteringly cold winter day. Being my usual obsessively early self, I arrived well over an hour before the rehearsal, parking underground, listening to my iPod in the dark, and trying not to accidentally fall asleep as I killed time before the gig. About 45 minutes before the start of the rehearsal, I finally pulled my bass out of the car and maneuvered my way up to street level, strolling over to the venue with plenty of time to spare.

Turning a corner with my bass, I noticed that the conductor for the gig was standing outside the rehearsal venue, chatting with another early arriver while glancing impatiently at her watch. The entire office building was locked tight–not surprising for a Sunday morning downtown, but sure to put a crimp it our morning rehearsal. Like a lemming, I started pulling on the door handle, thinking that it would magically open for me.

Nope.

I stood outside, bass in hand, my fingers chilling in the wintry air, as the conductor made a series of increasingly exasperated phone calls.

“What do you mean, you left the key? I’m standing outside! Where did you leave it? In your office? How could that possibly help?”

More and more musicians began to arrive, until the entire orchestra was standing outside on the sidewalk, a shivering mass of frosty cases and grumpy faces. Homeless guys were forced to reroute themselves around us as we began to slowly consume most of the sidewalk. In fact, take away the instruments and we could have easily passed for a group of homeless people ourselves, shivering in the Loop on a Sunday morning, huddled in front of the rehearsal space (soup kitchen), getting colder by the minute, waiting for the doors to let us in and play (eat).

Musicians remain musicians no matter what the circumstances, and I watched as two of the orchestra members started to chat animatedly about their various chamber music groups. Pretty soon, demo CDs and season brochures came out as these two players networked with each other, their breath puffing around their faces in the frigid air.

I couldn’t help but glance over toward the Wabash Avenue side of Symphony Center, the home of the Chicago Symphony, directly across the street from where we were huddled. The irony of huddling behind the home of the Chicago Symphony seemed to me that morning a perfect reminder of my place on the musical totem pole. I really am a bottom feeder, scuttling about, trying to get into office buildings when everyone else is asleep or at church.

“Does anyone have an apartment nearby?” asked the conductor. “Maybe we could all cram in and….”

I smiled at the thought of us hauling timpani up some rickety Chicago stairwell and cramming an orchestra into someone’s little bachelor pad. Would the violins be in the living room and the brass in the kitchen? Maybe they’d put me in the bathroom.

“Anybody know anywhere we can rehearse?” asked another ensemble member.

Folks halfheartedly mumbled various locations, perhaps realizing the dim likelihood of being able to actually find a new venue on the spur of the moment. I suggested that we try to ‘crash’ Symphony Center, grabbing the rehearsal room and seeing how long we could play before being shut down. That didn’t go over too well. I then suggested just unpacking and playing on the sidewalk. I had been standing outside for nearly 45 minutes already, so my bass was probably about as cold as it was going to get. Hey, we could even put out hats and collect spare change at the same time–a whole orchestra of buskers, complete with conductor!

No dice. Oh well.

I began shifting back and forth, tightening and relaxing my muscles to try and warm up, my fingers tired and numb from holding my bass up. The contractor suggested that we all head over to Starbucks for a coffee while they try to get things sorted out. I’m always up for a coffee, but especially so after being trapped out in the cold for the better part of an hour. Most of the musicians started to migrate down the block toward for coffee, myself included.

Rotating doors stood in my way, mocking me with their bass-crunching panels. Although it was technically possible to squeeze in one of these with a bass, I was nothing but trouble awaiting me if I attempted it, so I did a little dance through a connecting building, ignoring the suspicious gaze of the security guard, and squeezed through an old-fashioned regular door for my coffee. We had now divided into two groups–the coffee-desiring and the non-coffee-desiring.

As I stood in line, I glanced back toward the rehearsal venue and saw….musicians going in! Someone must have opened the door. Forgetting about coffee, I did a little dance back through the connecting lobby and out onto the street, The last of the non-coffee-desiring musicians were ntering the building as I sped down the sidewalk with my bass, the door shutting behind them just as I was coming up on the rehearsal venue.

I pulled on it.

It was locked.

Again!

I looked inside, seeing the elevator doors closing, the musicians heading upstairs a few stories to the rehearsal space. I banged on the glass, now really irritated, as the rest of the coffee-bound musicians returned.

“Where’d they go?”

“I…don’t…know!”

“Did they….forget about us?”

“……..”

“Does anybody have a cell phone number….for anybody?”

Apparently, survival of the fittest kicks in when musicians are locked out in the cold. No one returned to let us in! We were yet again trapped outside in the cold (now for well over an hour) without even a cup of coffee to show for it, and no one seemed to notice that half of the orchestra was missing.

One of the violinists started cracking wise about the whole thing, making me smile even in my annoyed state.

“That’s it! They’ve left us. Who’d notice that there are no strings? Who could say? Is this some kind of joke? Where’s the camera?”

About 15 minutes later, one of the musicians we’d seen enter the building came down the stairs. He looked at us, confused.

Bang! Bang! Bang!

I mouthed some very not-nice words through the glass.

He opened the door.

“What’s going on?”

rrrrrrrr……


We all tried to cram (unsuccessfully) into the tiny office building elevator, finally making it to the rehearsal space, quite late, cold, annoyed, and grumpy–the perfect way to start a rehearsal.

My bass was a block of wooden ice at this point, and my fingers felt like little icicles. I’ve been trapped in the cold like this with my bass before, so I know the feeling of trying to play the bass with icy club hands , but that doesn’t mean that it feels good. In fact, it feels downright lousy.

I remember locking car keys inside my car with my bass inside several years ago on a day with air temperature hovering in the single digits below zero (Fahrenheit). I had eaten dinner without realizing that I had left my keys in the car, and I then had to call a tow truck, stand in the cold for around an hour, get into my frozen car (with my frozen bass) and tear down the road to try and make my rehearsal on time. I came trampling in just as the tuning A was being given, unpacked my bass with my frozen hands, and immediately started playing.

That day was much worse than simply being locked outside for a while in the cold, so I couldn’t be too annoyed at the situation, but it was only a harbinger of things to come. We had another rehearsal that night in a different location, seven hours later. I had lessons sandwiched together in the intervening hours, so I sped off to the suburbs to go teach some bass, my 13 hour day of bass playing only beginning.

Part 2 – parking nightmares

All things being equal, it is almost always a better deal to accept in-town work rather than out-of-town work as a freelancer. The pay is usually better, the hours are usually shorter, and the artistic quality is usually higher.

The one big bummer with working “in-town”, at least in Chicago, is dealing with urban parking. Although I have learned over the years when it’s advisable to hunt and when I should admit defeat and park in the $20 garage, it is still much more of a hassle than simply pulling into the ubiquitous parking lot of suburban gigs, pulling out my gear, and walking in the door.

Even the logistics of simply getting all the right musicians in the right place at the right time can be a considerable challenge, as evidenced by my tale about being locked outside the hall on a bitter winter night. This kind of thing happens all the time, and though I may have thought that getting locked out was the worst I was going to get during that week of work, I was dead wrong.

We had a second rehearsal, again in the city, later that evening for this plucky little opera company. Finishing a rehearsal at noon and having nothing until 7:00 p.m. always causes groans among musicians. We usually prefer to double up rehearsals and then get a good solid day off. Working early in the morning and then late at night may be fine for folks gigging within walking distance of their home, but for musicians commuting from far-flung suburbs, it’s a no-win situation. You end up either sitting in traffic for half of that break in an attempt to get a few minutes at home, or you find yourself drinking eight cups of coffee at the local diner or bookstore, shaking, sweating, and twitching from both caffeine and a lack of activity.

I ended up scheduling lessons for the entire break, making for a long but profitable day. That’s the way I like to operate–when I’m out of the house I’m on the clock and working, and when I’m home I’m on my own schedule and can set my own priorities.


The second rehearsal of the day was in a city neighborhood just north of downtown Chicago, the worst kind of area for parking, with extremely specific restrictions everywhere (15 minute parking, no parking after 6 p.m. except residents, etc.) but a dearth of garages or other legal places to leave your car. I arrived at the second rehearsal for the day quite early, knowing what I chore it would be to find parking in this neighborhood. I had to bring my bass, stool, stand, and stand light to this gig (plus my laptop), and I didn’t relish the prospect of trudging around in the bitter cold for seven or eight blocks hauling all of this gear.

I looked on a map, realizing that there was a university parking lot with free night parking about a mile away. Perfect! I headed for the lot, actually finding a spot on the street about a block closer to the gig. I pulled out my gear, got it all balanced as best as I could manage, and started the long walk south.

I immediately realized that the distance was…well, much greater than it looked on the map. Block after block went by, and I began to regret my parking decision…not that there was much that I could do at that point. As I neared the gig I found a whole bunch of open spots on the streets just a block away. Aaargh! They hadn’t been there when I passed that street earlier, and they would of course be snatched up if I tried to go get my car at that point.

I played the rehearsal, enjoying the music (this was a good group) but dreading the slog back north with my gear. I contemplated leaving my gear and getting my car, but I hate doing that–if I’m already walking to the car, why not just haul all the gear with me and save as trip? Maybe when I’m 60 years old I’ll change my mind, but I’m still young enough and full of enough pride to not resort to this.

Heading out the door, I glanced in the alley, noticing that all of the musicians had parked their cars up against the building, blocking the alley from other cars but making life a lot easier for their commute home. Irritated, I began to trudge back toward my car. So this is what honesty gets you….

As I walked back with all of my gear, several of the orchestra musicians rolled down their windows as they passed me.

“Why are you walking?”

“I like walking!”

“Really?”

“Yes!”

They looked at me like I was a weirdo (not the first time I’ve gotten that look in my life!) and drove off.

Part 3 – behind the scenery

Now on our third rehearsal, the orchestra for this small but feisty opera company congregated at the concert venue (a nice modern facility) for our first time performing with staged cast. We had been informed that, though this was a large theater with an orchestra pit, we would be playing the entire score backstage.

One may wonder why management would choose, in a theater with a perfectly serviceable orchestra pit, to put the orchestra behind the scenery. One would be justified in wondering about this. Truth be told, I have absolutely no idea, and neither did the orchestra conductor. Questions directed toward her about this from the orchestra were met with a sardonic smile and a shrug, an appropriate response to many things that happened that week.

Despite the considerable size of the stage (and small operatic cast), we orchestra musicians found ourselves jammed into a little strip against the rear wall of the theater, crunched up beneath a big white backdrop which was elevated about five feet against the far wall. This, to put it mildly, made for an odd spectacle. Here we were, with plenty of space on three sides of us, jammed together like a bunch of sardines, our bows banging each other’s instruments, the trumpet’s bell pointed directly into the violist’s ear, the tympani player ducking and weaving like a musical boxer to try and see around my bass. When I asked if the white backdrop could be raised up a little more (my bass scroll kept banging against it as I played, and I didn’t have an extra inch to move elsewhere), a cranky stagehand launched into a condescending and aggressive lecture about how there as “absolutely no way” that this could be changed.

“OK,” I said. “But I’ll be banging against it the whole show trying to play.”

We were then treated to a lecture about how expensive the big white backdrop was and how we needed to be careful around it. The conductor flashed that sardonic grin at us, letting us know that she realized how ridiculous this all was. We proceeded to start the rehearsal in our sardine can setup, bumping elbows while staring out at the vast expanse of vacant stage on all sides of us.

We began our rehearsal, despite the fact that the stage crew was in the middle of a very noisy set-up just a few feet away from us. Such is the fate of small arts organizations. Time in a hall is expensive and therefore limited, and what would be spread out across multiple days and in multiple rooms (scenery assembly, ensemble rehearsal, vocal coaching) at the Metropolitan Opera must often happen at the same time in the same cramped space in smaller organizations. The result is often noisy and chaotic, and it makes rehearsal difficult if not impossible.

Drills buzzed loudly as we began the delicate strains of he opera, the conductor grinning and doing her best to tough it out through the anarchy. She tried to shout out some comments but quickly gave up, waving her hand disgustedly at the drill crew and soldiering on through the first part of the score.

The conductor had a camera trained on her that connected to two small monitors located on either side of the stage (they looked like old computer LCD screens). There was, however, no monitor for her! She had to basically wave her arms at a wall, hoping that the singers were paying attention. Communication is, to put it lightly, quite difficult under these circumstances! The conductor would try to move the tempo but have absolutely no success. Why? Well, perhaps the singers weren’t looking at the small LCB screens at that moment and missed the change in tempo. Accurately catching singer entrances was also practically impossible. The poor conductor had her arms up, poised and listening for an entrance, and then playing catch up with the tempo to bring the orchestra back in line with the singer.

This less-than-ideal situation gave the entire piece an untidy and out-of-phase quality, like watching a movie with the sound out of sync, and it certainly gave me a queasy feeling in the pit of my stomach.

To complicate matters further, the stage director for the production was what one would politely call a ‘hands-on’ type of guy. He dashed around back and forth like he’d just had 12 espresso shots, chattering animatedly and gesticulating wildly at cast, crew, and….us!

Instructions for the orchestra usually come through a chain of command in a theatrical situation, with directions from the stage communicated to the conductor, who then proceeds to pas them along to the ensemble. No so with this stage director. As we began our first rehearsal with him in the room, he immediately popped his head around the doorway, like a mother ostrich who’s just discovered a predator going after her baby. He began walking toward the orchestra, yelling animatedly and waving his arms around.

“No! Is not how music goes! Why is so slow? Why, why, why, WHY? It must move–yes yes….harp! Why is sound like that? NO! Is not the way!”

Part 4 – look out!

We had just wrapped up our dress rehearsal for this plucky little opera company, having cheerfully survived being locked out in the cold, rehearsing in all sorts of scattered venues across the city, enduring drills and nail guns during rehearsals, dodging overecaffeinated stage directors strutting and pecking backstage like giant roosters, and watched with fascination and confusion as our conductor attempted to lead the singers and ensemble backstage, with no monitors, headphones, or any sort of two-way line of communication whatsoever.

So how’d the concerts go?

Well, despite having our share of circumstantial struggles during the rehearsal process, we were seasoned pros, and as freelancers we’d all seen more than our share of the aforementioned wacky experiences. But the wackiness had not yet finished for the week, and we would soon have our biggest challenges thus far for the week.

Our first concert for the series happened on a Friday night, and I schlepped my gear down early, plopping down my $20 for parking (the same garage was $4.75 only a few years ago–jerks!) and hauling my gear down into the theater where our performances were happening. This was a great little theater (not that we could see much of it wedged backstage like we were), and I was excited to play these concerts. Working in the city, good money for fun performances–good times, good times. I got myself situated backstage, the first musician to show up (not a rare occurrence for me), tuned up my bass, and watched some video podcasts on my iPod as I waited for my colleagues to arrive.

People started streaming in, and by the half-hour mark the entire orchestra was assembled, brushing snow off their cases and tossing their coats up against the rear wall of the hall. As folks began tuning up and chatting with each other, I overheard a startling and alarming little tidbit:

Our concertmaster had, between the previous afternoon’s rehearsal and this evening’s opening night concert, caught a flight out of town, and he was now trapped in an airport one state over! And this performance had only one first violin, meaning that the primary orchestral melodic voice was…missing!

The freaked-out backstage scramble began.

One may wonder why a musician would fly out of town with such a tight time margin between rehearsal and performance, but such is the life of a freelance musician. Cobbling together a series of part-time jobs necessitates highly intricate scheduling, and this violinist did quite a bit of business out of town. For freelancers (and I’ve certainly done my fair share of this!), if it works, even just barely works, we do it. It’s part of the job, the piecemeal lifestyle of the at-large musician, and though I like to think that I wouldn’t fly out of town for just a few hours in the middle of winter and reasonably expect to make it back to Chicago (especially given today’s airline environment plagued with delays and cancellations), if someone had offered me a similar proposal, I may have rolled the scheduling dice and accepted the work.

Anyway, his original return flight had been canceled, and he was rescheduled for a later flight that was supposed to land at 6:30 pm at O’Hare International Airport. The downbeat for the opera was 7:30 pm. Land at 6:30 pm and make it into the hall, ready to go by 7:30 pm? On a Friday evening? Hmmm…this was probably not going to work.

In some towns, getting from the airport to the city center in an hour would be a breeze, but this is Chicago we’re talking about. Sprawl, traffic, congestion–yup, we’ve got it all. The actual stretch of road between airport and downtown was only eight miles, but those eight miles could crawl along at an excruciatingly slow speed, with a drive that would take five minutes in my native South Dakota easily taking over an hour.

And he didn’t have to just drive the distance. He also was facing:

Getting from tarmac to parking garage (this step alone could take 20 minutes easily)
Getting from parking garage to downtown (again, easily an hour)
Finding parking downtown
Getting from downtown parking to concert hall
He could have hopped the Chicago El Blue Line to get downtown, leaving his car stranded at the airport. But even that ride takes an hour (this train line is undergoing extensive renovation, making it even slower at present than usual–and it’s not all that fast normally!), making him automatically late if he boarded that train. His only hope was to get on the highway and pray for miraculously light rush hour congestion.

You could see the sweat start to break out on the contractor’s brow and the mental gears start to furiously whir. What was looking like a walk-in-the-park opening performance had suddenly turned into a frantic scramble for a last-minute replacement. Where on Earth could one find a quality violinist who knew the part (remember all the previously discussed adverse performance factors for this gig–not a great time for sightreading) and was available on a Friday night with less than an hour’s notice.

Much scurrying and frantic cell phone dialing commenced as we all looked around uneasily. As the contractor called down the list, we were getting cell phone updates from the stranded concertmaster:

“He’s landed! He’s on the highway. Uh, oh…traffic’s bad.”

Miraculously, a violinist who knew the piece answered her phone, and she got in her car and dashed downtown to help with damage control. She came in with a few minutes to spare, out of breath and brushing snow off of her case as she was quickly informed of the situation. The second violinist agreed to play the first violin part, and the stop-gap violinist agreed to play the second violin part.

The conductor smiled at all of us (though she must have been knotted with stress inside from all this last-minute panic), and we began.

About 20 minutes into the performance, the stranded concertmaster arrived, and there was some speedy shuffling as the second violinist moved back to her chair, the original concertmaster took over his part, and the stop-gap violinist took off, her job finished for the evening. Talk about a pro! Anyone who can go from hanging out at home to donning concert dress and driving through snow in Friday traffic in a matter of minutes, walk in, play the part, and slip out the back after her job’s done is a real freelance pro. If it were me, I’d probably have had my phone off, so I’d never have gotten the call.

One would think that our ensemble misfortunes would be over for the evening, but this was unfortunately not the case. About ten minutes before the conclusion of the opera, we heard a strange sound above us.

A piece of the light fixture suddenly came whizzing down from the fly lines directly above us.

Wooosh!

It slammed down in the middle of the orchestra, missing the flute player by less than a foot.

Bang!

We all jumped as if someone had thrown a grenade into the orchestra, looking around, unable to believe what had just happened. Then as we continued to play we all began looking up at the fly lines uneasily, squirming around in our chairs, waiting for something else to fall and take one of us out.

The next performance, I looked up at the lights as soon as I got to the hall. There was now duct tape all over the place up there, having been apparently applied sometime between the previous night’s performance and this evening’s show. I frowned, wondering just how well tape secured hot metal lights. Well the stage crew must know what they’re doing, right?…..uh….well, I just hope I don’t die before this week is done!