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Concerts

ensembleENSEMBLE (aka Concerto Grosso)

Loewi Lin A Far Cry is performing later this month at the Yellow Barn Music School and Festival in Putney, Vermont. The program is one of our West Coast Tour programs, and it is one I personally love. All three pieces feature soloists drawn from among the Criers. The individual spirit of the soloist, unashamed and uncompromising, is a great metaphor for A Far Cry itself, which was founded by musicians eager to make their own path. These pieces are the musical expression of this orchestra.

The 17th century Italian violinist and composer Arcangelo Corelli leads off the concert with Concerto Grosso opus 6 #9. Three soloists - two violinists and a cellist - indulge in improvised, virtuosic flights of fancy within the framework of a buoyant Baroque dance suite. This is the individual elevated by society, skimming along the crests of the wave created by the massed strings behind. Next, we turn to the Norwegian composer Edvard Grieg's Holberg Suite. Writing some 150 years after Corelli's death, Grieg nevertheless drew inspiration from Corelli and the Baroque. The Holberg Suite is alternately exhilarating and heartfelt, and finishes with a mad dash of a hoedown, featuring the concertmaster. A Far Cry concludes the evening with another, very different concerto grosso: Bela Bartok's Divertimento for Strings. Written in 1939, the Divertimento is vintage Bartok, combining a modernist ear with his beloved Eastern-European folk songs. The outer movements are lively and varied and the middle movement is nocturnal and ominous, and throughout Bartok pits the principal players - the solo string quartet - against the rest, often in a back-and-forth tug of war for supremacy.

We hope those in southern Vermont will come to this concert! Tickets are available at Yellow Barn's website.

Great Pictures from San Francisco

Jesse in San Francisco We were fortunate to have Bill Swerbo, the Bay Taper,  at our recent concert at the de Young Museum in San Francisco. Bill photographs and records some of the most amazing musicians out there performing in the trenches today, and posts the beautiful results on his blog. Take a look at the collection of photographs he took of A Far Cry here.

The photo above is of me (Jesse) looking all intense.

Pike Place Market

A Far Cry performed today at Seattle's world famous Pike Place Market to try to drum up interest in the big concert tomorrow night. In some ways, this was A Far Cry at its best - we showed up with instruments, stands, and T-shirts in tow, found a good high-foot-traffic spot, and took the music to the people! It was exhilarating and let's hope the huge audience we drew comes out to the concert tomorrow.

Portland Debut

Our Portland, Oregon debut is behind us, and we are now in the home stretch, with only the Memorial Day Seattle concert left to perform. But I'm still thinking about Portland. Portland has been, for me, an almost mythical place. In conversations with friends in Boston, when the question comes up: where do you want to end up?, the answer is invariably Berlin, Germany or Portland, Oregon. Berlin is self-explanstory I think, but why Portland? Now I have a much better idea.

Yes, it's a big city with big city amenities, clean air and water, excellent public transit, and stunning natural scenery easily accessible. But more than that, the people of Portland are energized! 75,000 of them will go to a political rally. They recycle. And, they go to concerts of young, unconducted chamber orchestras. We had such an enthusiastic audience, it was overwhelming. Thanks Portland! If you are reading this and were part of our Portland crowd, please leave a note telling us what you thought!

Santa Rosa Debut

We just finished our second major concert of the tour, at the beautiful (sonically and visually) Glaser Center in Santa Rosa. We had a small but very appreciative audience and an easygoing time on stage. Everyone was laughing and joking and we had a great time with Mozart, Grieg, and Tchaikovsky. Thanks Santa Rosa!

San Francisco Debut

A Far Cry played its first public concert on the West Coast last night, at the Koret Auditorium of the de Young Museum in Golden Gate Park, San Francisco! When we first entered the space, my breath was taken away. What an amazing theater. The seats rose steeply from the stage, with rows of mod leather armchairs separated by red-LED-lit aisles. The front and back-of-the-house staff at the museum were all extremely friendly and helpful, which allowed us musicians to concentrate on the music. We drew a wonderful audience of new and old friends, and we'd love to keep in touch. If you saw the concert last night, thanks again for coming. If you'd like to stay in the loop, sign up for our mailing list here. Also, we'd love to hear your feedback - click the "Audience Comments" link below and let us know what you thought!

A Far Cry packs for West Coast Tour!

smaller busDear Friends,

On Tuesday, May 13th, the Criers fly to San Francisco to begin their 3-week trek up the West Coast to Seattle, with stops along the way in Santa Rosa, Roseburg, and Portland. From outreach programs to concert hall performances, chamber music shenanigans, and a working retreat, A Far Cry is prepping for a very busy tour!

Do you know someone who enjoys music? Please bring them with you! Do you know someone in the cities we're visiting? Please tell them about our concert and invite them to attend! Here's the line up:

San Francisco - Thursday May 15th 2008 @ 8pm - Koret Auditorium at the de Young Museum

Santa Rosa - Sunday May 18th 2008 @ 3pm - Glaser Center at the Unitarian Universalist Congregation

Roseburg - Wednesday May 21st 2008 @ 7pm - Melrose Community Church [by donation]

Portland - Friday May 23rd 2008 @ 7:30pm - First Unitarian Church

Seattle - Monday May 26th 2008 @ 7pm - Great Hall at Town Hall

Tickets to these concerts can be purchased in advanced through Brown Paper Tickets, a Seattle-based fair trade ticketing service (www.brownpapertickets.com or toll-free 1-800-838-3006). Get your tickets ahead of time!

There are three very important and easy ways you can partner with A Far Cry in our commitment to bring you world-class, passionate performances:

1. Come to our concerts and bring your friends along!

2. Tell all of your friends about our performances, invite them to come, and also encourage them to visit our website to learn more about us!

3. Make a fully tax-deductible contribution to A Far Cry (we are a 501(c)3 non-profit incorporation). This is as easy as clicking the link on our main page and donating by credit card or mailing a check to the address listed under "Get Involved". This, our first Tour, is made possible entirely from your generous support.

As always, please contact us with any questions you have at info@afarcry.org / 617.297.2796.

We look forward to seeing all of our West Coast fans at the concerts!

There is no invisible wall between us

I would like to share with you a thought I've been very busy with lately. A thought about the significance of the audience in a performance. I have always believed in a phenomenon I call 'The Concert Miracle'. Maybe not always, but I think I remember it from sometime around when I was in High school. I remember my school orchestra conductor mentioning something about it, and I have never forgotten it. As the years go by I believe in it more and more- I believe in 'The Concert Miracle' so strongly, you could almost say that I count on it, that I trust it to happen every concert...

And what is this miracle? It is the miracle of the performer meeting their audience, and the way these two interact and affect each other.

It is easy to see how the performer affects their audience: the audience receives what the performer performs on the stage, they can see it, hear it, and hopefully feel it and think about what is happening on the stage, and how it affects them personally. We as performers put hours and hours of time in to finding the best ways to transform whatever it is that we want to share with our audience into the media that we are working with. I'd like to think that every performance, regardless of what kind of performance it is, is all about sending out a message to whoever is receiving it in the audience. Sometimes this message is one and strong, and sometimes it is soft and personal, but it is the goal of the performer to make the audience go through a process, and come out of the it just a bit different from how they walked in. Transfigured, you might say...

What is often not as easy to see is how the audience affects the performers. In my experience from being on stage I want to share how much the audience affects the performance, which is in my opinion no less but as much as the performers affect the audience. It is important to me to share this with you, since without all of you there is no performance!

While being on stage I can sense an energy coming from the mass of people sitting across from me, an energy that is unique and special to each performance. It is a combination of the different people which comply of the audience, the mood and set of mind each one of them are in at the specific moment of the performance, the weather, time and place, and of course of the performance as well. When we pour from the stage out to the seats, an energy comes shooting back which feeds us, and vice versa; when we get on the stage and this energy is in the air, that affects how the performance will start. I can not explain how I sense it, and why it happens- it is a miracle.

And this Miracle is a once-in-a-life-time experience, which will not live again outside of the memories of the ones who've shared it. It can not be captured in a recording, and it can not be duplicated. It is tragic in a way, how this special thing which was there and everyone could sense it is gone and lost forever. It is also wonderful in the sense that you have experienced a very special thing, which you have shared with the people around you.

'The Concert Miracle' is also the reason why 'A Far Cry' in concert is a totally different organism than the 'Rehearsal- A Far Cry'. Things suddenly come together. Suddenly there is only love between us, which can not be interrupted. Suddenly we are one unit which breaths and feels together, and we are free to do anything we want. When we go through the rough rehearsing period I hang on to my belief and know that in the concert, once we meet our audience, everything will be fine. Fine? no, everything will be... I don't have the right word to express this feeling that we share through the language of music. Something positive and wonderful, with a lot of love and honesty.

I am writing all of this in honor of our audience this past weekend, and of all the audiences around the world of the different arts whatever they may be. We need you, we feel you, and we want to thank you for being yourselves, because we do all of this only for you.

Much love,

Sharon

Welcome, Globe Readers!

If you read about A Far Cry in Friday's Boston Globe, thanks for stopping by to check us out! Take a look around our website - there's much to discover. If you haven't seen the online-only slideshow (complete with narration from Margaret and Jae), check it out here. The incredible photography is by Yoon Byun - see more of his work at yooners.com. Most of all, don't be a stranger! You can leave a comment right here on the blog by clicking "audience comments" below. You can sign up to receive an occasional concert notice email by clicking "Contact Us" above and joining our mailing list. Or (I saved the best for last) you can come see A Far Cry live in concert next weekend. Tickets are available through the "Concerts" link above.