Notes on the Arts by Marilyn Rowland

Notes on the Arts by Marilyn Rowland

Subscribe  |  Share    |  Print

Archive for the ‘reviews’ Category

CLOC’s ‘My Fair Lady’ We Could Have Watched All Night

Thursday, July 15th, 2010

Review by WILLIAM GRACE.  Mr. Grace is a summer resident of Bourne. He has a consulting business in educational publishing and an avid interest in musical theater.

You know the story, you know the music ,and you probably can sing many of the lyrics, yet “My Fair Lady” can still seem timeless, fresh, thrilling, and funny when brought to life by a talented theater company. The College Light Opera Company does just that this week at Highfield Theatre.

Samantha Helmstetter, as Eliza Doolittle, and Michael Puglia, as Professor Henry Higgins, generate a magnetic field that keeps the audience in the palm of their hands as they sing, dance, and fight their way through this Lerner and Loewe classic. Ms. Helmstetter’s Liza shines as a duchess even when she is described as “a squashed cabbage leaf” by Mr. Puglia’s overbearing and patronizing Higgins. They spar throughout the show with Liza enduring bullying, threats, and—worst of all—indifference, before emerging assertive and independent as a match for her tutor.

Mr. Puglia controls the stage, talking and singing the male chauvinistic fantasies of his virtues as “just an ordinary man,” and the dangers that befall when you “let a woman in your life.” He is at his best in the comic retelling of Liza’s triumphant performance at the Royal Ball where she passes as a lady of noble lineage.

Kyle Yampiro, as Colonel Pickering, is the straight man who sets up the laughs for the professor. He and Mr. Puglia and Ms. Helmstetter labor through the painful elocution lessons that lead to the joyful tango when Liza’s “Rain in Spain” finally falls on the plain in plain English. Mr. Puglia makes the logical Higgins touchingly sentimental when he sings “Accustomed to Her Face.”

Ms. Helmstetter makes Liza’s Cockney accent and dialect work beautifully in her early songs. “Wouldn’t It Be Loverly?” is accompanied by a talented quartet of Cockney lads played by Mike Dorsey, Scott Wasserman, Brandon Grimes, and Brad Baron. They harmonize nicely with Ms. Helmstetter’s rich voice. She is amusingly homicidal in delivering her own fantasy of revenge when she sings “Just you wait, ‘enry ‘iggins.” When she sings “I Could Have Danced All Night,” she is accompanied by Higgins’s servants played by Rachel Marschke, Stephanie Dietz, Brynn Lewallen, Brian Bowman, and Ethan Contreras. It is a magical moment on stage because you come to understand that Liza is experiencing the joy of achievement. The moment gets better when the servants withdraw behind the curtain, and Ms. Helmstetter stands alone in the spotlight and sings the verses again. She really has a wonderful voice and the opening night audience recognized her with applause long after she left the stage.

There are plenty of laughs in this production, most of them coming right from the book and lyrics by Alan Jay Lerner. Liza’s stilted attempts at small talk at the Ascot opening day races are still very funny. Drifting from the safe conversational waters of weather and health, Liza nearly drowns in the telling of her aunt’s death: “Them ‘as pinched it [her straw hat], done her in.”

Brian Shaw does justice to the swagger and charm of Alfred P. Doolittle and leads his buddies in rollicking renditions of “With a Little Bit of Luck,” and “Get Me to the Church on Time.” James Soller, as Liza’s would-be beau Freddy, has a fine voice for the wistful song, “On the Street Where You Live.”

Stage director Mark A. Pearson makes the Ascot races memorable with his crowd of top-hatted gentlemen and begowned ladies posing stiffly while singing about how thrilling they feel and how frantic they are. Of course, Liza’s irrepressible enthusiasm bursts this bubble of decorum when she urges her horse to “move your blooming ****.”

Choreographer Heidi Kloes puts nearly the entire ensemble on stage for high-stepping dances in the flower market scenes with Mr. Doolittle. Costume designer Kake Boucher provides elegant gowns for the ladies. Liza’s transformation from frowzy to regal is stunning. The Cockney dancers are handsome in mixed plaids.

From overture to curtain call, this performance was superb.

“My Fair Lady” continues tonight and tomorrow night at 8. Tickets are $30 and are available by calling 508-548-0668, or by visiting the CLOC box office, 58 Highfield Drive, in Falmouth. Box office hours are Monday through Saturday from 10 AM to 12:30 PM, 2 to 5 PM, and 7 to 9 PM.

“Guys and Dolls” opens Tuesday, July 20, and runs through Saturday, July 24.

“Evita”: Intriguing, Powerful, Spare

Monday, July 12th, 2010

Review by MARILYN J. ROWLAND,  originally published in the Enterprise on Friday, July 9, 2010.

The College Light Opera Company’s “Evita” is presented in muted colors on a dimly lit, sparsely furnished stage, with archival photographs and film of Eva Duarte de Perón and Juan Perón playing silently, almost continuously in the background on two large screens on either side of the stage. It is an intriguing production, and the subdued, yet powerful, style emphasizes the emotional appeal of Eva Perón and the crucial role she came to play in Argentina.

“Evita” was originally written as a rock opera concept album in 1976, with lyrics by Tim Rice and music by Andrew Lloyd Webber. The songs, notably “Don’t Cry for Me, Argentina,” had become popular prior to the opening of the play in London in 1978 and in New York in 1978. (The movie, starring Madonna, came later, in 1996.)

Perhaps because of its musical album origins, or because it attempts to cover a lot of ground (Evita’s life, from age 15 to her death at the age of 33), the musical sometimes seems like a series of musical vignettes, rather than a cohesive, ongoing story.

The character of Che (sometimes interpreted as the revolutionary Che Guevara) helps to hold the story together with a running commentary on Evita’s life, providing continuity, and a heavy dose of criticism of Evita, countering her public image as Santa Evita, the patron saint of Argentina. Che shows us a woman who slept her way to the top of her show business career and, once First Lady of Argentina, was more intent on being dazzling than in truly solving the problems of the poor.

Also providing clues to the action is a Greek chorus, who add a dramatic touch.

Directed for CLOC by John R. Lucas, with musical direction by David Moschler, “Evita” is a fascinating look not only at Eva Perón and Argentina, but also the state of the world in the 1940s and ’50s, and the political realities of that time and our own. Unless one is intimately familiar with the life of Eva Perón, however, it does take some attentive listening to the lyrics to follow the action.

The show opens in an unusual fashion, with cast members on stage taking chairs, facing the audience, as the audience is coming in and taking their own seats. Cast members linger and talk to each other, before finding their seats, just as the audience is still conversing. On stage, the Argentine residents are watching a movie, suddenly interrupted with the shocking news that Eva Perón has entered immortality.

The scene switches to the funeral with the simple act of the cast changing the positions of their chairs, as they sing a “Requiem for Evita.” Che, played with just enough cynicism and self-righteousness by Justin John Moriz, introduces us to Eva, stunningly portrayed by Amanda Horvath, who, at 15, yearns to leave her impoverished life in the slums for Buenos Aires.

Both Mr. Moriz and Ms. Horvath have fine singing voices and are well-suited for their roles. Ms. Horvath bears a striking resemblance to Eva Perón, whose likeness is almost constantly displayed on the photo screens, and her voice was often strong and lyrical, rich with overtones. Sometimes, however, her voice was barely audible, and seemed tentative. Since she clearly has the talent for the role, this may have been due to opening night issues.

At 15, Eva convinces her lover, Magaldi, a nightclub singer (“On This Night of a Thousand Stars”) to take her to Buenos Aires, though he thinks it is a bad idea. “The likes of you will get swept up in the morning with the trash,” he sings to her. Patrick J. Hagen is an amusing Magaldi with a strong voice.

In “Buenos Aires,” the raised platform on the stage allows the dancers to add their foot stompings to the rhythms of the music, but it also makes it harder to hear Eva. The choreography is compelling, however.

In “Goodnight and Thank You,” Eva runs through a series of lovers as she rises to the top.

Another humorous and wonderfully done scene follows in “The Art of the Possible,” in which Juan Perón rises to the top of the military leadership by winning a game of musical chairs. Tall and powerful looking, with a voice to match, Brandon Grimes makes a fine Juan Perón.

Eva and Juan finally meet at a charity concert for victims of an earthquake. As another couple (Ethan Contreras and Rachel Marschke) dance the tango, Eva and Juan get to know each other, ultimately joining the tango, another very effective scene.

In “Another Suitcase, Another Hall,” Perón’s mistress (Christine Lacey) is told to leave, and she sings poignantly of the sorrows of love.
“A New Argentina” concludes the first act with a rousing expression of the people’s growing support for Perón.

Act 2 has a number of fine scenes as well, including Eva’s declaration of her “need to be dazzling. The people need it, and so do I,” in “High Flying Adored,” with Che.

“Santa Evita” features four local young people: Grace Brakeman of Woods Hole, who will enter 8th grade in the fall; Fiona Hopewell of Falmouth, who will be going into 7th grade; Pippa Ryan of Falmouth, who enters 11th grade in the fall; and Gussie Gordon of Boston, entering 6th grade. Their sweet young voices were joined by the voices of four women, then the women’s chorus, then the men, building to a powerful conclusion.

Costumes, by Kate Boucher, were well done, evoking the time period, and the social class of the characters. Set design was by Tim Boucher, and choreography was by Heidi Kloes.

“Evita” continues tonight and tomorrow night at 8 at Highfield Theatre in Falmouth. Tickets are $30 and are available by calling 508-548-0668 or by visiting the CLOC box office, 58 Highfield Drive, in Falmouth. Box office hours are Monday through Saturday from 10 AM to 12:30 PM, 2 to 5 PM, and 7 to 9 PM.

The Beatles Come to Cape Cod

Friday, October 24th, 2008

Classical Mystery Tour
By MARILYN J. ROWLAND

Originally published in the Falmouth Enterprise on Friday, October 17, 2008.

The Beatles came to the Barnstable High School Performing Arts Center in Hyannis last Saturday evening and Sunday afternoon, in the form of the Classical Mystery Tour, a Beatles tribute band that specializes in performing with local symphony orchestras. The concert was the first in this season’s series of Pops concerts presented by Maestro Jung-Ho Pak and the Cape Cod Symphony Orchestra. The multi-generational crowd went wild, offering up not one, but three energetic standing ovations, singing and clapping along on cue, and having a glorious time, some remembering the magic of 40-plus years ago, and others feeling the energy of a “live” Beatles performance for perhaps the first time.

A Beatles orchestra performance may seem odd at first because the Beatles never performed live with an orchestra, but many Beatles songs were written for various degrees of orchestration and recorded with accompanying violins, cellos, horns, saxophones, and piccolo trumpets. “Eleanor Rigby,” for instance, was recorded with a double string quartet—no guitars at all, while trumpets add festivity to “Penny Lane.”
Some songs incorporated more instruments than others. According to Wikipedia, “Hey Jude” was recorded with an orchestra consisting of 10 violins, three violas, three cellos, two flutes, one contra bassoon, one bassoon, two clarinets, one contra bass clarinet, four trumpets, four trombones, two horns, percussion, and two string basses. In the original, the orchestra clapped their hands and sang along to the chorus. “All You Need Is Love” has a similar orchestral backup and includes snippets of classical works amid the melody.

Last weekend’s concerts began with an orchestral medley of some of the Beatles’ big hits. Mr. Pak conducted with verve and passion, but the orchestra-only rendition was missing some of the magic I had come to hear.

Finally the Beatles (Jim Owen as John Lennon, Tony Kishman as Paul McCartney, Tom Teeley as George Harrison, and Chris Camilleri as Ringo Starr) bounded out onto the stage, with almost enough energy for me to imagine that they really were the Beatles. They were all good musicians; the drummer was particularly impressive, and it was remarkable how much each singer looked and sounded like his Beatles character. Their costumes added to the illusion, beginning with their tailored suits, moving to Sgt. Pepper band uniforms, and finally to individual costumes, including a cream-colored suit, granny glasses, and longer hair for John. More use might have been made of a large screen behind the orchestra, which only occasionally displayed different colors, ripples on the water, or a peace sign.

The songs were all familiar to the audience and well-received. I was a little disappointed though, wanting the singers to be more like Beatles, to sound more like them, to sing with more characteristic harmonies, move more like them, express the Beatles’ quirky sense of humor more often, and to call each other John, Paul, George, and Ringo, not their real names. There was an occasional odd joke; toward the end, “John” said, “We only have time for a few more songs, and this song is one of them.” You probably had to have been there. It was funny in a nice Beatles-like deadpan way.
Highlights included Mr. Kishman’s rendition of “Yesterday” as Paul, with acoustic guitar and strings, which was appropriately tender. Good use of the orchestra was made on “All You Need Is Love,” and the trumpets were delightful in “Penny Lane.” I also enjoyed “Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band” for its varied and creative use of the orchestral instruments. “Eleanor Rigby” was satisfying, featuring string players. There was a nice echo effect in “A Day in the Life,” and the intensifying crescendo was excellent.

“While My Guitar Gently Weeps” included some impressive guitar playing (Eric Clapton played guitar in the recorded version) and some psychedelic musical effects. Mr. Kishman also took the lead in “Long and Winding Road,” looking and sounding remarkably like Paul McCartney at the piano, with most of the orchestra playing. As John, Mr. Owen did a good job on “Imagine.” “Hey Jude” was played as an encore, the overhead disco light flashing, and the entire audience enthusiastically singing along.

My main complaint was the sound system. The amplification of the guitars was excessive, obscuring more delicate and varied contributions of the orchestra, and the singers seemed to want to belt out every song, rather than offering some of the more nuanced renditions. All the rock equipment: guitars, microphones, amplifiers, and drums tended to hide the orchestra from view as well.

Jung-Ho Pak looked great in his Sgt. Pepper jacket, though, and he seemed to be doing a magnificent job conducting the orchestra, or various elements of it, through the performance.

Eugene Friesen, Cellist

Friday, April 25th, 2008

Eugene Friesen Expresses The Multiple Voices Of The Cello

Posted in: Entertainment

By MARILYN J. ROWLAND
Apr 25, 2008 – 5:07:35 PM
Digg this story!

Printer friendly page

Contemporary improvisational cellist Eugene Friesen made his annual trip to Falmouth recently to perform at the Fishmonger’s Café Coffee House, entertain young school children, and teach some elements of jazz to a group of 25 student cellists of all ages and abilities.

Mr. Friesen, who lives in Vermont and teaches at the Berklee School of Music in Boston, is a master of the cello. He has recorded numerous solo and ensemble CDs. He has won Grammy Awards as a member of the Paul Winter Consort, and has performed all over the world. He blends traditional classical music with Brazilian folk melodies, wild improvisational jazz, and his own original compositions, demonstrating that there is no limit to the music that can be created with a cello.

One of Mr. Friesen’s missions is to make great music of all kinds accessible to audiences of all ages, especially children, and he has created an entirely different persona for this purpose, that of CelloMan. It was as CelloMan that he performed for children in kindergarten to third grade at the East Falmouth Elementary School last Wednesday morning.

Mr. Friesen opens each CelloMan show by playing the prelude to the first Bach cello suite, and concludes each performance by donning a mask of Pablo Casals and playing Bach’s “Air on a G String.” In between these tributes to the classical masters, he offers a wide variety of innovative, contemporary, and improvisational music to give students an introduction to the types of music that can be played on the cello.

In one amusing bit, Mr. Friesen wore a squirrel mask, becoming the squirrel that he claims broke into his house and discovered his cello. Using rapid, darting squirrel-like movements, he plucked the cello, tentatively at first, and then with abandon, as he (the squirrel) fell in love with the sound of the instrument.

One of the most memorable moments was “Humpback Harmony,” a duet between Mr. Friesen playing an electrified cello and a recording of the song of a humpback whale. The other-worldly sounds of the whales were echoed by the haunting sounds of the cello harmonics and Mr. Friesen’s unique reverberating plucking technique. The whole effect was mesmerizing, holding both children and adults spellbound.

That afternoon, Mr. Friesen joined 25 cello students of Nikki Garcia-Renart at the Woods Hole Community Center for a workshop on playing one rhythm against another. The students ranged in age from 5 to 60, including some who had been playing for only a few months and others who were quite accomplished musicians. Mr. Friesen easily adopted his teaching to make the workshop inspiring for all.

“He expands the horizon for all of us,” said Ms. Garcia-Renart. Mr. Friesen has been teaching these annual workshops for Ms. Garcia-Renart’s students for 10 years or so, and focuses on a different aspect of playing each time. In the past, they have improvised using the pentatonic scale, played 12-bar blues, studied different types of rhythm, and worked on improvisational ensemble playing.

At 8 PM, Mr. Friesen joined guitarist Freddie Bryant and pianist Tim Ray at Fishmonger’s Café in Woods Hole to become “Cello Nova,” a dynamic trio of outstanding musicians who effortlessly (it seemed) and passionately blended classical music, improvisational jazz, and Latin American rhythms and melodies.

Mr. Friesen opened the concert with a long, slow note, leading into a jazzed-up Brazilian version of Bach’s “Air on the G String,” joking afterward that it came from Bach’s “Brazilian period.” This was followed by three lively folk-style Brazilian pieces, a song he learned in Siberia, music from Colombia and Venezuela, and music by Brazilian composers Antonio Carlos Jobim and Ernesto Nazareth.

Playing the cello with a quiet elegance, Mr. Friesen often closed his eyes, as if transported by the music, but also provides whirlwind displays of cello virtuosity. Using an incredible array of original techniques, such as an earthy multiple-finger, double-handed pizzicato string plucking, a range of percussive techniques, visually and aurally expressive bowings, and dramatic slides up and down the fingerboard, Mr. Friesen produced both gorgeous slow warm tones on his cello, sometimes doubling them with his voice, and blurringly fast explosions of sounds, showing there are no limits to the types of music that can be created with a cello, at least with his practiced hands.

Mr. Bryant and Mr. Ray played brilliantly as well, each taking solos on their instruments, as well as playing duets with Mr. Friesen. Mr. Bryant recited Maya Angelou’s poem “Alone” (“Nobody, but nobody can make it out here alone”) while playing a guitar accompaniment he had composed for it. Mr. Ray played a catchy version of Duke Ellington’s “In a Mellow Tone,” on the piano.

Two of my favorite pieces were “Remembering You,” a beautiful, slow melodic tune written by Mr. Friesen, and one of the final pieces on the program, a piece called “Maracaibo,” after the city in Venezuela, because “we borrowed some of their rhythms.” This piece was electrifying , involving an incredible array of sounds and techniques, and extraordinary music.

Fishmonger’s Café was a perfect location for the concert, warm and intimate, like the music. Food and drink are available during the concert, and several tables are set up on either side of the chairs that make up the main part of the seating. Most seats have a good view of the musicians, and also of Vineyard Sound, out the windows.

The next concert in Tom Renshaw’s series of coffee houses at Fishmonger’s is on April 29 at 8 PM (doors open at 7) when the jazz group Downstreet Review will perform a blend of swing, blues, folk music and jazz. Members include Tom Renshaw, Joe Sutton, John Cullity, Bruce Millard and Geordie Gude. Tickets are $15 and are available at Under the Sun in Woods Hole and Eight Cousins Books in Falmouth.

Falmouth Chorale

Thursday, April 3rd, 2008

The Falmouth Chorale is planning a casual, family-friendly concert called “Spring Sing” on May 10, which will include the Greater Falmouth Mostly All-Male Men’s Chorus, and a community singalong. The program will include selected Brahms’ Gypsy Songs, a spiritual, and Begin the Beguine. The two choirs, both directed by John Yankee, will sing La Habanera from Carmen and a medley from Die Fledermaus.

The Chorale is also welcoming new members, including those who want to try out . Rehearsals for this event begin Tuesday, April 8, at 6:30 PM at the John Wesley United Methodist Church, at the corner of Jones and Gifford Streets. There is a $15 participation fee, which includes music.

Following is my recent review of the Falmouth Chorale:

Chorale’s ‘Te Deum’ A Glorious Finale

Posted in: Entertainment
By MARILYN J. ROWLAND
Originally posted: Mar 20, 2008 – 2:27:25 PM

John Yankee directed the Falmouth Chorale and Orchestra in an exhilarating performance of Fauré’s “Requiem” and Dvorak’s “Te Deum” this past weekend at St. Patrick’s Church on Main Street in Falmouth, and he seemed just as pleased and awed with the magnificence of the performance as the audience was. The chorale and the orchestra complemented each other well, bringing out the best in each other.

As Robert Wyatt pointed out in his informative and animated pre-concert lecture, Mr. Yankee creatively chose to pair two very different pieces of music written within a few years of each other by two composers who were contemporaries of each other, and who rose to celebrity at about the same time, in their late 30s. The pieces complement each other: Fauré’s calmly beautiful celebration of death, and Dvorak’s more spirited interpretation of an early Christian hymn of praise, “Te Deum Laudamus.” Also on the program was the wonderfully festive “Slavonic Dance Op. 46, No. 4 in F major.”

Gabriel Fauré did not write his “Requiem in D minor,” one of his best-known compositions, for anyone in particular. He is quoted as saying he composed it “for nothing…for fun, if I may be permitted to say so.” He saw death as a “happy deliverance, an aspiration toward the happiness above, rather than as a painful experience,” and the “Requiem” reflects this peaceful, serene mood.

Originally composed in 1887-1888, the piece was not initially well received, and Fauré revised it, adding two movements that had traditionally been spoken parts at a funeral and increased the orchestral instrumentation twice by 1890. The Falmouth Chorale performed one of the early revisions of the work, with a limited range of instrumentation, contributing to the ethereal beauty of the performance and evoking a feeling of tranquility, the quiet passion of chorus supported by the deep resonant sound of the low strings.

This version of the “Requiem” included seven movements, the most famous of which is the soprano aria, “Pie Jesu.” Mr. Yankee’s decision to have the aria sung by a boy soprano was an excellent one. Benjamin Young, a Lakeville seventh grader, sang it angelically, with a delicate, vulnerable quality, emphasizing its simplicity and pureness.

Philip Lima sang the baritone solo, with full, rich, and dramatic tone in the “Offertorium” and in the “Libera Me,” his voice filling the church over the pizzicato strings, and the horns adding drama and strength to the chorus. This was Mr. Lima’s first performance with the Falmouth Chorale, and it was a wonderful introduction to his substantial talents as a singer.

After intermission, the orchestra returned with Antonin Dvorak’s “Slavonic Dance, Op. 46, No. 4 in F major,” a delightful waltz-like piece, both graceful and exuberant. Dvorak composed his Slavonic dances in response to Johannes Brahms’s suggestion that he create a set of Czech dances similar in spirit to Brahms’s own Hungarian dances. Dvorak used Brahms’s dances as a model and incorporated characteristic Czech rhythms in his dances, but made up his own melodies to express both the essence of the Czech character and his own feelings. The dances, originally written for piano and later orchestrated, brought Dvorak to prominence.

The final piece on the program, Dvorak ‘s “Te Deum,” was the pièce de résistance of the evening. Written in 1892, to celebrate the 400th anniversary of the discovery of America by Christopher Columbus, the piece was first performed in New York in October of that year (on the same program was Dvorak’s Slavonic Dance No. 4) with a chorus of 250 singers, conducted by Dvorak himself. The 65 members of the Falmouth Chorale brought the “Te Deum” to life in glorious style, aided by a strong performance by the 36-member orchestra, and outstanding solos by Mr. Lima and soprano Martha Evans, who is well-known to Falmouth Chorale and Cape Cod Opera audiences for the extraordinary range and power of her voice.

The four movements of Dvorak’s “Te Deum” are written in symphonic form, beginning with a fast movement, followed by a slow one, then a scherzo-like movement, and ending with an energetic finale. Most of the piece is sung and played at full volume and with celebratory spirit. Ms. Evans’s solos were exquisite, the woodwinds responding to her phrases nicely. Mr. Lima was also excellent, his solos supported by trombones and, later, by low strings and woodwinds. That followed by a duet was extraordinary, and the audience responded enthusiastically with a much-deserved standing ovation for all performers.

The program notes were well prepared, providing not only background material on the music and the performers, but also the words, in both Latin and English, to both the “Requiem” and the “Te Deum.” It was also good to see that Frederick Johnson, the former director of the Falmouth Chorale, has been honored with a new $1,000 Falmouth Chorale scholarship named after him.

Grange Coffeehouse, East Sandwich

Saturday, March 29th, 2008

Grange Coffeehouse Offers Evening Of First-Rate Music And Congeniality

By MARILYN J. ROWLAND
Originally published in the Enterprise on March 28, 2008

Sandwich can be pretty quiet in the wintertime. Four years ago, Mark Wiklund and his friends decided to remedy that situation by providing a place for people to go—in Sandwich, in the off-season—to hear good music and enjoy an evening out with friends. They decided to start an informal coffeehouse, and the result is the very successful Grange Hall Coffeehouse, which brings diverse styles of traditional and contemporary music to the appreciative residents of Sandwich and surrounding towns. Concerts are held once a month from September to May (except for December, January, and February, when the weather is just too unpredictable).

A recent concert featured the Back Bay Guitar Trio, a very impressive group of guitarists who delighted the audience with their unique blend of classical, contemporary, and Brazilian jazz music, played on classical guitars. The program began with Annika Lückenbergfeld, a young professional classical mandolin player from Germany, currently studying improvisation at Berklee College of Music, and also included a talented Sandwich High School sophomore Anna Gannett, who played classical guitar.

Ms. Lückenbergfeld played mandolin flawlessly, gracefully, and delicately, offering a range of musical styles from an 18th century French composition to a 21st century Japanese piece, a Brazilian piece, and a work by a German composer written just for her. The pieces were intricate, featuring quickly changing moods and dynamics and showing off the full range of the instrument, as well as occasional use of rhythmic, percussive slapping of the instrument. For those used to the mandolin as a bluegrass instrument, this was a wonderful introduction to the classical and modern potential of the instrument.

At this, her first concert in which she spoke English to the audience, Ms. Lückenbergfeld exhibited a wonderful stage presence, keeping her composure when a string broke while she was tuning on stage. “And now I play for the first time on a seven-string mandolin,” she smiled.

The Back Bay Guitar Trio was formed about seven years ago by David Newsam, John Mason, and Steve Marchena, three very versatile guitar players who play together with remarkable technical precision and an expressive sense of unity. Though they all began their musical lives on the electric guitar, they all gravitated toward the classical guitar, attracted by the sound of the instrument and by the music of Brazil and other lands and eras.

The trio began with three folk songs from Brazil, by turn happy, meditative, and jazzy, featuring rhythmic handslapping of the strings. This was followed by a Mozart medley, an arrangement of two pieces written by Leopold and Wolfgang for piano. The music was exquisitely played, and the good feeling was augmented by the smiles from the performers, especially Mr. Mason, a very talented musician and former student of Mr. Newsam’s at Berklee, who maintained a vibrant smile throughout much of the evening, communicating with the other musicians through his eyes, his face, and his very expressive body.

The guitar players had trouble with tuning too, on this rainy night in March, triggering a comment from one of the players: “Guitarists spend half their lives tuning and the other half playing out of tune.”

The quality of the music more than made up for these minor distractions. The concert continued with a medley of works by Argentine composer Astor Piazolla and Spanish composer Fernando Sor, and selections from Brazilian composer Heitor Villa-Lobos’ studies for Segovia, the last of which was dark, moody, and contemporary. There was more Brazilian music: a gentle, soothing melody from Antonio Carlos Jobim, and a more energetic and rhythmic based on folk melodies.

Each of the three members of the trio played a solo, and there were also several duets, in various combinations. A highlight of the evening came when Ms. Lückenbergfeld joined the trio on stage. The interplay of the guitars and the mandolin was very satisfying, and I enjoyed the rhythmic handslapping of the guitar in response to mandolin phrases.

Jazz was well represented by the trio’s transcriptions of a Gershwin piano prelude and a Dave Brubeck composition. Mr. Marchena added harmonica to a couple of numbers, and all three participated in an intricate piece featuring a great variety of guitar-slapping percussion: on the strings, on the front, back, and sides of instrument, providing a whole new range of percussive effects.

The performance ended with an amusing encore: the theme from the Mario Brothers video game. It is hard to believe, but the Back Bay Guitar Trio made even this otherwise annoying theme sound like beautiful music.

Careful selection of talented performers has done much to make the Grange Coffeehouse a success, but there is more to this place than great music. The concert was made all the more enjoyable by the setting, the comfortable, friendly, and intimate Grange Coffeehouse, 91 Old County Road, East Sandwich East Sandwich. Built in 1889, the hall has been a social center for the community for years and currently hosts a wide variety of social and cultural events.

As the Grange Coffeehouse, the building is set up with rows of card tables and chairs (dating back to the 1950s), creating an authentic coffeehouse setting. The tables are covered with folksy tablecloths, in different patterns and colors. Coffee, tea, and other beverages are sold, along with tempting desserts. The stage is small, but warmly lit, and nicely decorated with artwork and plants. It is a friendly place to be, and you can tell that a lot of the audience members know each other and enjoy the congenial atmosphere.

The next concert at the Grange Coffeehouse is April 12, at 8 PM (doors open at 7:30), featuring Aztec Two-Step. The duo consists of Rex Folwer and Neal Shulman, who have been playing and singing jazzy acoustic folk music together since 1971. Known for their “intellectual lyricism” and “ethereal harmonies,” they are sure to attract an enthusiastic crowd to the Grange Coffeehouse. Tickets at $22/person. For more information, contact the coffeehouse at 508-418-0888 or visit http://www.grangehallcoffeehouse.org.

Third Fret Coffeehouse: A Review

Friday, March 28th, 2008

Coffeehouse Offers Folk, Acoustic Music for All Ages

By MARILYN J. ROWLAND (Originally published in the Enterprise on March 14, 2008)

The Third Fret Coffeehouse [Third Fret's MySpace page includes audio files of upcoming or recent performers] springs to life once a month with the sounds of acoustic music and song. Concerts are held from September to May in the friendly, folksy and comfortable atmosphere of Liberty Hall in Marstons Mills. Built in 1859, Liberty Hall has long served as a community center for Marstons Mills and it is well-suited as a coffeehouse. It is located near the center of town at 2150 Main Street right next to the Marstons Mills Library.

My husband and I visited the Third Fret recently to see blues guitar legends Paul Geremia and Bob Martin. Considered to be one of the best country blues finger pickers, Mr. Geremia did not disappoint. He played six- and twelve-string guitars, harmonica, and sang songs of his own composition and songs made famous by legendary blues performers like Ledbelly, Blind Lemon Jefferson, Robert Johnson, Blind Willie McTell, and others. He also told entertaining stories about meeting early blues musicians, or playing in places where they had played.

Mr. Geremia, whose home is in Rhode Island, was accompanied by Cape resident Robbie Phillips on a “strung trombone,” sort of a one-string washtub bass that Mr. Phillips was very adept at playing. The two have known each other for 35 years.
Opening for Mr. Geremia was Bob Martin, another old-time blues guitarist and harmonica player. Also a songwriter, Mr. Martin sang a song he wrote for his father, a housepainter who always wanted to be a tap dancer. Another memorable song was “The River Turns the Wheel,” which Mr. Martin wrote about the mills in his hometown of Lowell.

Liberty Hall has been used as a coffeehouse off and on over the years. The Third Fret Coffee House was run by Eileen DiBouno for the past three years or so, but operations have recently been taken over by Tracey Delfino and Larry Zarella. They are enthusiastic about bringing quality folk and acoustic music to Marstons Mills and giving musicians a great place to play. Many appreciate playing in a coffeehouse in a concert setting, instead of a bar where they must compete with loud conversations and other distractions.

The hall holds about 100 people, fewer if tables are set up for guests and goodies. The goodies are a nice touch. Coffee, tea, and homebaked goods are included in the cost of admission, though donations are also appreciated.
Ms. Delfino’s son, Trevor, helps out too, acting as stage manager, helping with sound checks, supplying the musicians with everything they need; he sets up tables and chairs, and generally makes sure things go smoothly. “He does a pretty amazing job,” says his proud mom, and he is only 9 years old.

Ms. Delfino enjoys the coffeehouse herself, appreciating not only the music, but also the ambiance. Because no alcohol is served, parents can bring their kids.

The next concert, the first one booked by Ms. Delfino and Mr. Zarella, is March 22. It will feature Mr. Zarella, a singer-songwriter whose warm folk-style voice has been compared to James Taylor, and the acoustic folk pop group, Tripping Lily. A native of Cape Cod, Mr. Zarella lived in a remote area of Alaska for 15 years, playing music in a band and as a solo artist. He moved back to the Cape a couple of years ago and has been touring in the area and elsewhere. His CD, “No Place Special” features his original music.

Tripping Lily is a Cape-based folk pop quartet consisting of Demetrius Becrelis on guitar, mandolin, and ukulele, his brother, Alex, on mandolin and guitar, Monica Rizzio on violin, and Laird Boles on string bass. All band members sing, and all write songs, a unique blend of pop, folk, jazz, bluegrass, and classical music. Their influences are diverse, from James Taylor to Nat King Cole to pop singer Colbie Caillat and rock band Starting Line, and their enthusiasm for their music is infectious.

The combination of Larry Zarella and Tripping Lily should be a treat for traditional and contemporary folk music fans. The show is March 22. Doors open at 7 PM, and the show begins at 7:30.

Another upcoming show of special interest to singer songwriter fans is the Songwriter’s Series on April 19 at 8 PM featuring Danielle Miraglia, Jacob Johnson, and Chris Ayer.

For more information on either show, contact Tracey Delfino at tracey@trespassmusic.org.

Other blogs

Follow us on Facebook

Advertisement