Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Stoop show

Brooklyn accordioni­st entertains neighbors

- KATHY WILLENS

“I try to come up with songs of hope. We need to keep our spirits up.” — Paul Stein, who is performing concerts from his stoop in Brooklyn

NEW YORK — Paul Stein felt useless — stuck in his Brooklyn brownstone apartment, watching his neighbors suffer deprivatio­ns as covid-19 swept the city.

Then, on television, the retired public-sector lawyer and political activist saw people around the world rallying: “I saw people in France and Italy banging pots and pans out their windows, clapping and singing from balconies. I wanted to do this in my neighborho­od. “

He knew what he had to do. He took out his accordion. And he played.

His stage is the steps leading up to his building, his stoop. “For as long as people have been hanging out on their stoops and socializin­g with their neighbors, they’ve been doing it from their stoops,” he said. “The natural acoustics of the narrow street bring the music to my neighbors.”

He regularly sings and plays during the nightly 7 p.m. rounds of applause for health care and frontline workers. Over the past few weeks, he has played four 45-minute concerts.

Stein had played on his block before: scary music for the children on Halloween while his partner Elena handed out candy. This time, he alerted the neighbors with a telephone call. At 71, he’s in a high-risk group. So, he didn’t want to encourage a get-together at close distance.

“I’m very conscienti­ous,” he said. “I don’t want to do anything to promote social gathering.”

Stein calls his impromptu concerts the “Emergency Accordion Stoop Extravagan­za,” or “EASE.” He decorated a constructi­on helmet with the words “Accordion Extravagan­za” on the front and “Keep Back Six Feet” on the back.

“Elena doesn’t like it,” he says, “but I do.”

The accordion isn’t an instrument beloved by all; it has been the butt of many jokes (What’s the difference between an accordion and a concertina? I takes longer to burn an accordion.) But Stein loves it and has been playing since he was 8. He has a vast repertoire of songs, and he sometimes adds the melodica, a free-reed type of large harmonica.

“I’m doing mostly instrument­als. … a polka, a tango, the ‘Hokey Pokey’ and other fun things,” he said. “Sometimes ‘This Land is Your Land’; ‘La Cucaracha’, the Mexican hat dance; Bill Withers’ ‘Lean on Me’. People like up-tempo things.”

His neighbors seem to appreciate his efforts.

Madeline Chang, who just retired after 20 years teaching in New York City’s schools, and partner Tim Sozen danced on a tiny concrete patch in their front yard.

“We were inspired because the music is so wonderful … so powerful,” Chang said. “It’s its own language.”

Said Stein: “I try to come up with songs of hope. We need to keep our spirits up.”

And regardless, “What’s more Brooklyn than hanging out with your neighbors on the stoop?”

 ?? (AP/Kathy Willens) ?? Musician Paul Stein, who has played the accordion since he was 8 years old, entertains neighbors April 15 with an “Emergency Accordion Stoop Extravagan­za” concert from the top step of his stoop in the Sunset Park neighborho­od of Brooklyn in New York. “Music ... lifts people’s spirits and brings them together,” Stein says. “We need to keep our spirits up. We need hope now. That’s what we need to get through this difficult period.”
(AP/Kathy Willens) Musician Paul Stein, who has played the accordion since he was 8 years old, entertains neighbors April 15 with an “Emergency Accordion Stoop Extravagan­za” concert from the top step of his stoop in the Sunset Park neighborho­od of Brooklyn in New York. “Music ... lifts people’s spirits and brings them together,” Stein says. “We need to keep our spirits up. We need hope now. That’s what we need to get through this difficult period.”
 ??  ?? Neighbor Ben Langsam, 16, looks down from the roof of his family’s home in Brooklyn’s Sunset Park neighborho­od while listening to one of Stein’s accordion stoop concerts.
Neighbor Ben Langsam, 16, looks down from the roof of his family’s home in Brooklyn’s Sunset Park neighborho­od while listening to one of Stein’s accordion stoop concerts.
 ??  ?? Tim Sozen (right) and partner Madeline Chang dance April 15 on a small patch of concrete in front of their Brooklyn apartment during a stoop concert by Stein. “We were inspired because the music is so wonderful. Music is so powerful. It’s its own language,” says Chang.
Tim Sozen (right) and partner Madeline Chang dance April 15 on a small patch of concrete in front of their Brooklyn apartment during a stoop concert by Stein. “We were inspired because the music is so wonderful. Music is so powerful. It’s its own language,” says Chang.
 ??  ?? A woman holds her cellphone up while on a video call with her parents in Ohio so they can listen and watch one of Stein’s accordion stoop concerts.
A woman holds her cellphone up while on a video call with her parents in Ohio so they can listen and watch one of Stein’s accordion stoop concerts.
 ??  ?? Neighbor Claudia
Langsam, 13, peers out her window to the street scene below during one of Stein’s accordion stoop concerts.
Neighbor Claudia Langsam, 13, peers out her window to the street scene below during one of Stein’s accordion stoop concerts.

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