The Standard Journal

With the concert halls shut, NY Philharmon­ic takes to sidewalk

- By Robert Bumsted

NEW YORK — With performanc­e halls shut because of the coronaviru­s pandemic, the best concert venue a violinist could hope for one recent October Friday was a sidewalk in the Bronx.

Fiona Simon tuned her instrument as she prepared for one of her only public performanc­es with the New York Philharmon­ic in months.

The setting was a far cry from the orchestra’s usual home at Manhattan’s Lincoln Center. Traffic hummed and sirens wailed as a crew laid cables and unloaded speakers from the back of a double-parked pickup truck.

But Simon said the pop-up concert — one of several the Philharmon­ic has been playing around the city this fall — filled a need she’s had since indoor performanc­es stopped in March, depriving musicians of not just a paycheck, but a sense of purpose.

“You’re not a complete musician if you’re just playing for yourself,” Simon said.

Simon, a native of England who joined the New York Philharmon­ic in 1985, says she has struggled to cope with not having an audience, sometimes performing for friends virtually over the phone.

“I think it’s a fundamenta­l human need,” she said.

The Philharmon­ic came up with the idea for a series of outdoor, popup performanc­es over the summer, even as it was forced to lay off or furlough nearly half its staff as it faced a multimilli­on-dollar budget deficit.

On that Friday, Simon and a few colleagues played three corners of the city as part of the series they’re calling the NY Phil Bandwagon. The first show of the day was outside a Bronx school, the second outside a public library in Queens and the final one in a Brooklyn park.

The bandwagon itself — a red Ford pickup truck — rolls up to the curb carrying a sound system, music stands, lights and orange traffic cones to keep the audience socially distant. The musicians follow in a van.

The Philharmon­ic plans to hold its final Bandwagon concert of the year this weekend, and then resume the program in the spring.

New York’s street life has always been vibrant, but these days, the city’s outdoor spaces are more important than ever as many residents are stuck in small apartments working from home.

“There’s this whole myth that New York is dying, but it’s only dying in the places that were built for people not from New York — the people in New York are thriving,” said Curtis Stewart, a Grammy-nominated violinist who joined for a guest performanc­e with the Bandwagon.

 ?? AP-Mary altaffer ?? Members of the NY Phil Bandwagon, from left, violinist Fiona Simon, counterten­or and producer Anthony Roth Costanzo, violinist Curtis Stewart and viola player Robert Rinehart perform in the Flushing neighborho­od of the Queens borough of New York, on Oct. 2. The NY Phil Bandwagon travels to three unannounce­d locations around New York City, Friday through Sunday, for an impromptu pullup chamber music concert as part of the New York Philharmon­ic’s Fall 2020 activities.
AP-Mary altaffer Members of the NY Phil Bandwagon, from left, violinist Fiona Simon, counterten­or and producer Anthony Roth Costanzo, violinist Curtis Stewart and viola player Robert Rinehart perform in the Flushing neighborho­od of the Queens borough of New York, on Oct. 2. The NY Phil Bandwagon travels to three unannounce­d locations around New York City, Friday through Sunday, for an impromptu pullup chamber music concert as part of the New York Philharmon­ic’s Fall 2020 activities.

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