Pearls Before Breakfast
Can one of the nation's great musicians cut through the fog of a D.C.
rush hour? Let's find out.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hnOPu0_YWhw#
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/04/04/AR2007040401721.html?referrer=emailarticle
By Gene Weingarten
Washington
Post Staff Writer
Sunday, April 8, 2007; Page W10
Sunday, April 8, 2007; Page W10
HE
EMERGED FROM THE METRO AT THE L'ENFANT PLAZA STATION AND POSITIONED HIMSELF
AGAINST A WALL BESIDE A TRASH BASKET. By most measures, he was nondescript: a
youngish white man in jeans, a long-sleeved T-shirt and a Washington Nationals
baseball cap. From a small case, he removed a violin. Placing the open case at
his feet, he shrewdly threw in a few dollars and pocket change as seed money,
swiveled it to face pedestrian traffic, and began to play.
It was
7:51 a.m. on Friday, January 12, the middle of the morning rush hour. In the
next 43 minutes, as the violinist performed six classical pieces, 1,097 people
passed by. Almost all of them were on the way to work, which meant, for almost
all of them, a government job. L'Enfant Plaza is at the nucleus of federal
Washington, and these were mostly mid-level bureaucrats with those
indeterminate, oddly fungible titles: policy analyst, project manager, budget
officer, specialist, facilitator, consultant.
Each
passerby had a quick choice to make, one familiar to commuters in any urban
area where the occasional street performer is part of the cityscape: Do you stop and listen? Do you hurry past with a
blend of guilt and irritation, aware of your cupidity but annoyed by the
unbidden demand on your time and your wallet? Do you throw in a buck, just to
be polite? Does your decision change if he's really bad? What if he's really
good? Do you have time for beauty? Shouldn't you? What's the moral mathematics
of the moment?
On that
Friday in January, those private questions would be answered in an unusually
public way. No one knew it, but the fiddler standing against a bare wall
outside the Metro in an indoor arcade at the top of the escalators was one of
the finest classical musicians in the world, playing some of the most elegant
music ever written on one of the most valuable violins ever made. His performance was arranged by The Washington Post
as an experiment in context, perception and priorities -- as well as an
unblinking assessment of public taste: In a banal setting at an inconvenient
time, would beauty transcend?
The
musician did not play popular tunes whose familiarity alone might have drawn
interest. That was not the test. These were masterpieces that have endured for
centuries on their brilliance alone, soaring music befitting the grandeur of
cathedrals and concert halls.
The
acoustics proved surprisingly kind. Though the arcade is of utilitarian design,
a buffer between the Metro escalator and the outdoors, it somehow caught the
sound and bounced it back round and resonant. The violin is an instrument that
is said to be much like the human voice, and in this musician's masterly hands,
it sobbed and laughed and sang -- ecstatic, sorrowful, importuning, adoring,
flirtatious, castigating, playful, romancing, merry, triumphal, sumptuous.
So, what
do you think happened?
HANG ON,
WE'LL GET YOU SOME EXPERT HELP.
Leonard
Slatkin, music director of the National Symphony Orchestra, was asked the same
question. What did he think would occur, hypothetically,
if one of the world's
great violinists had performed incognito before a traveling rush-hour audience
of 1,000-odd people?
"Let's
assume," Slatkin said, "that he is not recognized and just taken for
granted as a street musician . . . Still, I don't think that if he's really
good, he's going to go unnoticed. He'd get a larger audience in Europe . . .
but, okay, out of 1,000 people, my guess is there might be 35 or 40 who will
recognize the quality for what it is. Maybe 75 to 100 will stop and spend some
time listening."
So, a
crowd would gather?
"Oh,
yes."
And how
much will he make?
"About
$150."
Thanks,
Maestro. As it happens, this is not hypothetical. It really happened.
"How'd
I do?"
We'll
tell you in a minute.
"Well,
who was the musician?"
Joshua
Bell.
"NO!!!"
A onetime
child prodigy, at 39 Joshua Bell has arrived as an internationally acclaimed
virtuoso. Three days before he appeared at the Metro station, Bell had filled
the house at Boston's stately Symphony Hall, where merely pretty good seats
went for $100. Two weeks later, at the Music Center at Strathmore, in North
Bethesda, he would play to a standing-room-only audience so respectful of his
artistry that they stifled their coughs until the silence between movements.
But on that Friday in January, Joshua Bell was just another mendicant,
competing for the attention of busy people on their way to work.
Bell was
first pitched this idea shortly before Christmas, over coffee at a sandwich
shop on Capitol Hill. A New Yorker, he was in town to perform at the Library of
Congress and to visit the library's vaults to examine an unusual treasure: an
18th-century violin that once belonged to the great Austrian-born virtuoso and
composer Fritz Kreisler. The curators invited Bell to play it; good sound,
still.
"Here's
what I'm thinking," Bell confided, as he sipped his coffee. "I'm
thinking that I could do a tour where I'd play Kreisler's music . . ."
He
smiled.
".
. . on Kreisler's violin."
It was a
snazzy, sequined idea -- part inspiration and part gimmick -- and it was typical
of Bell, who has unapologetically embraced showmanship even as his concert
career has become more and more august. He's soloed with the finest orchestras
here and abroad, but he's also appeared on "Sesame Street," done
late-night talk TV and performed in feature films. That was Bell playing the
soundtrack on the 1998 movie "The Red Violin." (He body-doubled, too,
playing to a naked Greta Scacchi.) As composer John Corigliano accepted the
Oscar for Best Original Dramatic Score, he credited Bell, who, he said,
"plays like a god."
When Bell
was asked if he'd be willing to don street clothes and perform at rush hour, he
said:
"Uh,
a stunt?"
Well,
yes. A stunt. Would he think it . . . unseemly?
Bell
drained his cup.
"Sounds
like fun," he said.
Bell's a
heartthrob. Tall and handsome, he's got a Donny Osmond-like dose of the cutes,
and, onstage, cute elides into hott. When he performs, he is usually the only
man under the lights who is not in white tie and tails -- he walks out to a
standing O, looking like Zorro, in black pants and an untucked black dress
shirt, shirttail dangling. That cute Beatles-style mop top is also a strategic
asset: Because his technique is full of body -- athletic and passionate -- he's
almost dancing with the instrument, and his hair flies.
He's
single and straight, a fact not lost on some of his fans. In Boston, as he
performed Max Bruch's dour Violin Concerto in G Minor, the very few young women
in the audience nearly disappeared in the deep sea of silver heads. But
seemingly every single one of them -- a distillate of the young and pretty --
coalesced at the stage door after the performance, seeking an autograph. It's
like that always, with Bell.
Bell's
been accepting over-the-top accolades since puberty: Interview magazine once said
his playing "does nothing less than tell human beings why they bother to
live." He's learned to field these things graciously, with a bashful duck
of the head and a modified "pshaw."
For this
incognito performance, Bell had only one condition for participating. The event had been described to him as a
test of whether, in an incongruous context, ordinary people would recognize
genius. His condition: "I'm not comfortable if you call this genius."
"Genius" is an overused word, he said: It can be applied to some of
the composers whose work he plays, but not to him. His skills are largely
interpretive, he said, and to imply otherwise would be unseemly and inaccurate.
It was an
interesting request, and under the circumstances, one that will be honored. The
word will not again appear in this article.
It would
be breaking no rules, however, to note that the term in question, particularly
as applied in the field of music, refers to a congenital brilliance -- an
elite, innate, preternatural ability that manifests itself early, and often in
dramatic fashion.
One
biographically intriguing fact about Bell is that he got his first music
lessons when he was a 4-year-old in Bloomington, Ind. His parents, both
psychologists, decided formal training might be a good idea after they saw that
their son had strung rubber bands across his dresser drawers and was
replicating classical tunes by ear, moving drawers in and out to vary the
pitch.
TO GET TO
THE METRO FROM HIS HOTEL, a distance of three blocks, Bell took a taxi. He's neither
lame nor lazy: He did it for his violin.
Bell
always performs on the same instrument, and he ruled out using another for this
gig. Called the Gibson ex Huberman, it was handcrafted in 1713 by Antonio Stradivari
during the Italian master's "golden period," toward the end of his career,
when he had access to the finest spruce, maple and willow, and when his
technique had been refined to perfection.
"Our
knowledge of acoustics is still incomplete," Bell said, "but he, he
just . . . knew."
Bell
doesn't mention Stradivari by name. Just "he." When the violinist
shows his Strad to people, he holds the instrument gingerly by its neck,
resting it on a knee. "He made this to perfect thickness at all
parts," Bell says, pivoting it. "If you shaved off a millimeter of
wood at any point, it would totally imbalance the sound." No violins sound as wonderful as Strads from
the 1710s, still.
The front
of Bell's violin is in nearly perfect condition, with a deep, rich grain and
luster. The back is a mess, its dark reddish finish bleeding away into a
flatter, lighter shade and finally, in one section, to bare wood.
"This
has never been refinished," Bell said. "That's his original varnish.
People attribute aspects of the sound to the varnish. Each maker had his own
secret formula." Stradivari is thought to have made his from an
ingeniously balanced cocktail of honey, egg whites and gum arabic from
sub-Saharan trees.
Like the
instrument in "The Red Violin," this one has a past filled with
mystery and malice. Twice, it was stolen from its illustrious prior owner, the
Polish virtuoso Bronislaw Huberman. The first time, in 1919, it disappeared
from Huberman's hotel room in Vienna but was quickly returned. The second time,
nearly 20 years later, it was pinched from his dressing room in Carnegie Hall.
He never got it back. It was not until 1985 that the thief -- a minor New York
violinist -- made a deathbed confession to his wife, and produced the
instrument.
Bell
bought it a few years ago. He had to sell his own Strad and borrow much of the
rest. The price tag was reported to be about $3.5 million. (....um...playing a 3.5m violin in subway~ sound crazy~)
All of
which is a long explanation for why, in the early morning chill of a day in
January, Josh Bell took a three-block cab ride to the Orange Line, and rode one
stop to L'Enfant.
AS METRO
STATIONS GO, L'ENFANT PLAZA IS MORE PLEBEIAN THAN MOST. Even before you arrive,
it gets no respect. Metro conductors never seem to get it right:
"Leh-fahn." "Layfont." "El'phant."
At the
top of the escalators are a shoeshine stand and a busy kiosk that sells
newspapers, lottery tickets and a wallfull of magazines with titles such as
Mammazons and Girls of Barely Legal. The skin mags move, but it's that lottery
ticket dispenser that stays the busiest, with customers queuing up for Daily 6
lotto and Powerball and the ultimate suckers' bait, those pamphlets that sell
random number combinations purporting to be "hot." They sell briskly.
There's also a quick-check machine to slide in your lotto ticket, post-drawing,
to see if you've won. Beneath it is a forlorn pile of crumpled slips.
On
Friday, January 12, the people waiting in the lottery line looking for a long
shot would get a lucky break -- a free, close-up ticket to a concert by one of
the world's most famous musicians -- but only if they were of a mind to take
note.
Bell decided to begin with
"Chaconne" from Johann Sebastian Bach's Partita No. 2 in D Minor.
Bell calls it "not just one of the greatest pieces of music ever written,
but one of the greatest achievements of any man in history. It's a spiritually powerful
piece, emotionally powerful, structurally perfect. Plus, it was written for a
solo violin, so I won't be cheating with some half-assed version."
Bell
didn't say it, but Bach's "Chaconne" is also considered one of the
most difficult violin pieces to master. Many try; few succeed. It's
exhaustingly long -- 14 minutes -- and consists entirely of a single, succinct
musical progression repeated in dozens of variations to create a dauntingly
complex architecture of sound. Composed around 1720, on the eve of the European
Enlightenment, it is said to be a celebration of the breadth of human
possibility.
If Bell's
encomium to "Chaconne" seems overly effusive, consider this from the
19th-century composer Johannes Brahms, in a letter to Clara Schumann: "On
one stave, for a small instrument, the man writes a whole world of the deepest
thoughts and most powerful feelings. If I imagined that I could have created,
even conceived the piece, I am quite certain that the excess of excitement and
earth-shattering experience would have driven me out of my mind."
So,
that's the piece Bell started with.
He'd
clearly meant it when he promised not to cheap out this performance: He played
with acrobatic enthusiasm, his body leaning into the music and arching on
tiptoes at the high notes. The sound was nearly symphonic, carrying to all
parts of the homely arcade as the pedestrian traffic filed past.
Three
minutes went by before something happened. Sixty-three people had already passed
when, finally, there was a breakthrough of sorts. A middle-age man altered his
gait for a split second, turning his head to notice that there seemed to be
some guy playing music. Yes, the man kept walking, but it was something.
A
half-minute later, Bell got his first donation. A woman threw in a buck and
scooted off. It was not until six minutes into the performance that someone
actually stood against a wall, and listened.
Things never got much better.
In the three-quarters of an hour that Joshua Bell played, seven people stopped
what they were doing to hang around and take in the performance, at least for a
minute. Twenty-seven gave money, most of them on the run -- for a total of $32
and change. That leaves the 1,070 people who
hurried by, oblivious, many only three feet away, few even turning to look.
No, Mr.
Slatkin, there was never a crowd, not even for a second.
It was
all videotaped by a hidden camera. You can play the recording once or 15 times,
and it never gets any easier to watch. Try speeding it up, and it becomes one
of those herky-jerky World War I-era silent newsreels. The people scurry by in
comical little hops and starts, cups of coffee in their hands, cellphones at
their ears, ID tags slapping at their bellies, a grim danse macabre to
indifference, inertia and the dingy, gray rush of modernity.
Even at
this accelerated pace, though, the fiddler's movements remain fluid and
graceful; he seems so apart from his audience -- unseen, unheard, otherworldly
-- that you find yourself thinking that he's not really there. A ghost.
Only then
do you see it: He is the one who is real. They are the ghosts.
IF A GREAT MUSICIAN PLAYS GREAT MUSIC BUT NO
ONE HEARS . . . WAS HE REALLY ANY GOOD?
It's an
old epistemological debate, older, actually, than the koan about the tree in
the forest. Plato weighed in on it, and philosophers for two millennia
afterward: What is beauty? Is it a measurable fact (Gottfried Leibniz), or
merely an opinion (David Hume), or is it a little of each, colored by the
immediate state of mind of the observer (Immanuel Kant)?
We'll go
with Kant, because he's obviously right, and because he brings us pretty
directly to Joshua Bell, sitting there in a hotel restaurant, picking at his
breakfast, wryly trying to figure out what the hell had just happened back
there at the Metro.
"At
the beginning," Bell says, "I was just concentrating on playing the
music. I wasn't really watching what was happening around me . . ."
Playing
the violin looks all-consuming, mentally and physically, but Bell says that for
him the mechanics of it are partly second nature, cemented by practice and
muscle memory: It's like a juggler, he says, who can keep those balls in play
while interacting with a crowd. What he's mostly thinking about as he plays, Bell
says, is capturing emotion as a narrative: "When you play a violin piece,
you are a storyteller, and you're telling a story."
With
"Chaconne," the opening is filled with a building sense of awe. That
kept him busy for a while. Eventually, though, he began to steal a sidelong
glance.
"It
was a strange feeling, that people were actually, ah . . ."
The word
doesn't come easily.
". .
. ignoring me."
Bell is
laughing. It's at himself.
"At
a music hall, I'll get upset if someone coughs or if someone's cellphone goes
off. But here, my expectations quickly diminished. I started to appreciate any
acknowledgment, even a slight glance up. I was oddly grateful when someone
threw in a dollar instead of change." This is from a man whose talents can
command $1,000 a minute.
Before he
began, Bell hadn't known what to expect. What he does know is that, for some
reason, he was nervous.
"It
wasn't exactly stage fright, but there were butterflies," he says. "I
was stressing a little."
Bell has
played, literally, before crowned heads of Europe. Why the anxiety at the
Washington Metro?
"When
you play for ticket-holders," Bell explains, "you are already
validated. I have no sense that I need to be accepted. I'm already accepted. Here, there was this thought:
What if they don't like me? What if they resent my presence . . ."
He was,
in short, art without a frame. Which, it turns out, may have a lot to do with
what happened -- or, more precisely, what didn't happen -- on January 12.
MARK
LEITHAUSER HAS HELD IN HIS HANDS MORE GREAT WORKS OF ART THAN ANY KING OR POPE
OR MEDICI EVER DID. A senior curator at the National Gallery, he oversees the
framing of the paintings. Leithauser thinks he has some idea of what happened
at that Metro station.
"Let's
say I took one of our more abstract masterpieces, say an Ellsworth Kelly, and
removed it from its frame, marched it down the 52 steps that people walk up to
get to the National Gallery, past the giant columns, and brought it into a
restaurant. It's a $5 million painting. And it's one of those restaurants where
there are pieces of original art for sale, by some industrious kids from the
Corcoran School, and I hang that Kelly on the wall with a price tag of $150. No
one is going to notice it. An art curator might look up and say: 'Hey, that
looks a little like an Ellsworth Kelly. Please pass the salt.'"
Leithauser's
point is that we
shouldn't be too ready to label the Metro passersby unsophisticated boobs.
Context matters.
Kant said
the same thing. He took beauty seriously: In his Critique of Aesthetic
Judgment, Kant argued that one's ability to appreciate beauty is related to
one's ability to make moral judgments. But there was a caveat. Paul Guyer of
the University of Pennsylvania, one of America's most prominent Kantian
scholars, says the 18th-century German philosopher felt that to properly
appreciate beauty, the viewing conditions must be optimal.
"Optimal,"
Guyer said, "doesn't mean heading to work, focusing on your report to the
boss, maybe your shoes don't fit right."
So, if
Kant had been at the Metro watching as Joshua Bell play to a thousand
unimpressed passersby?
"He
would have inferred about them," Guyer said, "absolutely
nothing."
And
that's that.
Except it
isn't. To really understand what happened, you have to rewind that video and
play it back from the beginning, from the moment Bell's bow first touched the
strings.
White
guy, khakis, leather jacket, briefcase. Early 30s. John David Mortensen is on
the final leg of his daily bus-to-Metro commute from Reston. He's heading up
the escalator. It's a long ride -- 1 minute and 15 seconds if you don't walk.
So, like most everyone who passes Bell this day, Mortensen gets a good earful
of music before he has his first look at the musician. Like most of them, he
notes that it sounds pretty good. But like very few of them, when he gets to
the top, he doesn't race past as though Bell were some nuisance to be avoided.
Mortensen is that first person to stop, that guy at the six-minute mark.
It's not
that he has nothing else to do. He's a project manager for an international
program at the Department of Energy; on this day, Mortensen has to participate
in a monthly budget exercise, not the most exciting part of his job: "You
review the past month's expenditures," he says, "forecast spending
for the next month, if you have X dollars, where will it go, that sort of
thing."
On the
video, you can see Mortensen get off the escalator and look around. He locates
the violinist, stops, walks away but then is drawn back. He checks the time on
his cellphone -- he's three minutes early for work -- then settles against a
wall to listen.
Mortensen
doesn't know classical music at all; classic rock is as close as he comes. But
there's something about what he's hearing that he really likes.
As it
happens, he's arrived at the moment that Bell slides into the second section of
"Chaconne." ("It's the point," Bell says, "where it
moves from a darker, minor key into a major key. There's a religious, exalted
feeling to it.") The violinist's bow begins to dance; the music becomes
upbeat, playful, theatrical, big.
Mortensen
doesn't know about major or minor keys: "Whatever it was," he says,
"it made me feel at peace."
So, for
the first time in his life, Mortensen lingers to listen to a street musician.
He stays his allotted three minutes as 94 more people pass briskly by. When he
leaves to help plan contingency budgets for the Department of Energy, there's
another first. For the first time in his life, not quite knowing what had just
happened but sensing it was special, John David Mortensen gives a street
musician money.
THERE ARE
SIX MOMENTS IN THE VIDEO THAT BELL FINDS PARTICULARLY PAINFUL TO RELIVE:
"The awkward times," he calls them. It's what happens right after
each piece ends: nothing. The music stops. The same people who hadn't noticed
him playing don't notice that he has finished. No applause, no acknowledgment.
So Bell just saws out a small, nervous chord -- the embarrassed musician's
equivalent of, "Er, okay, moving right along . . ." -- and begins the
next piece.
After
"Chaconne," it is Franz Schubert's "Ave Maria," which
surprised some music critics when it debuted in 1825: Schubert seldom showed
religious feeling in his compositions, yet "Ave Maria" is a
breathtaking work of adoration of the Virgin Mary. What was with the sudden
piety? Schubert dryly answered: "I think this is due to the fact that I
never forced devotion in myself and never compose hymns or prayers of that kind
unless it overcomes me unawares; but then it is usually the right and true
devotion." This musical prayer became among the most familiar and enduring
religious pieces in history.
A couple
of minutes into it, something revealing happens. A woman and her preschooler
emerge from the escalator. The woman is walking briskly and, therefore, so is
the child. She's got his hand.
"I
had a time crunch," recalls Sheron Parker, an IT director for a federal
agency. "I had an 8:30 training class, and first I had to rush Evvie off
to his teacher, then rush back to work, then to the training facility in the
basement."
Evvie is
her son, Evan. Evan is 3.
You can
see Evan clearly on the video. He's the cute black kid in the parka who keeps
twisting around to look at Joshua Bell, as he is being propelled toward the
door.
"There
was a musician," Parker says, "and my son was intrigued. He wanted to
pull over and listen, but I was rushed for time." (.... maybe adult become too busy on their own
life and forgot the real sound of beauty..am i the same as them?????)
So Parker
does what she has to do. She deftly moves her body between Evan's and Bell's,
cutting off her son's line of sight. As they exit the arcade, Evan can still be
seen craning to look. When Parker is told what she walked out on, she laughs.
"Evan
is very smart!"
The poet
Billy Collins once laughingly observed that all babies are born with a
knowledge of poetry, because the lub-dub of the mother's heart is in iambic
meter. Then, Collins said, life slowly starts to choke the poetry out of us. It
may be true with music, too.
There was
no ethnic or demographic pattern to distinguish the people who stayed to watch
Bell, or the ones who gave money, from that vast majority who hurried on past,
unheeding. Whites, blacks and Asians, young and old, men and women, were
represented in all three groups. But the behavior of one demographic remained
absolutely consistent. Every single time a child walked past, he or she tried to stop and
watch. And every single time, a parent scooted the kid away.
IF THERE
WAS ONE PERSON ON THAT DAY WHO WAS TOO BUSY TO PAY ATTENTION TO THE VIOLINIST,
it was George Tindley. Tindley wasn't hurrying to get to work. He was at work.
The glass
doors through which most people exit the L'Enfant station lead into an indoor
shopping mall, from which there are exits to the street and elevators to office
buildings. The first store in the mall is an Au Bon Pain, the croissant and
coffee shop where Tindley, in his 40s, works in a white uniform busing the
tables, restocking the salt and pepper packets, taking out the garbage. Tindley
labors under the watchful eye of his bosses, and he's supposed to be hopping,
and he was.
But every
minute or so, as though drawn by something not entirely within his control,
Tindley would walk to the very edge of the Au Bon Pain property, keeping his
toes inside the line, still on the job. Then he'd lean forward, as far out into
the hallway as he could, watching the fiddler on the other side of the glass
doors. The foot traffic was steady, so the doors were usually open. The sound
came through pretty well.
"You
could tell in one second that this guy was good, that he was clearly a
professional," Tindley says. He plays the guitar, loves the sound of
strings, and has no respect for a certain kind of musician.
"Most
people, they play music; they don't feel it," Tindley says. "Well,
that man was feeling it. That man was moving. Moving into the sound."
A hundred
feet away, across the arcade, was the lottery line, sometimes five or six
people long. They had a much better view of Bell than Tindley did, if they had
just turned around. But no one did. Not in the entire 43 minutes. They just
shuffled forward toward that machine spitting out numbers. Eyes on the prize.
J.T.
Tillman was in that line. A computer specialist for the Department of Housing
and Urban Development, he remembers every single number he played that day --
10 of them, $2 apiece, for a total of $20. He doesn't recall what the violinist
was playing, though. He says it sounded like generic classical music, the kind
the ship's band was playing in "Titanic," before the iceberg.
"I
didn't think nothing of it," Tillman says, "just a guy trying to make
a couple of bucks." Tillman would have given him one or two, he said, but
he spent all his cash on lotto.
When he
is told that he stiffed one of the best musicians in the world, he laughs.
"Is
he ever going to play around here again?"
"Yeah,
but you're going to have to pay a lot to hear him."
"Damn."
Tillman
didn't win the lottery, either.
BELL ENDS
"AVE MARIA" TO ANOTHER THUNDEROUS SILENCE, plays Manuel Ponce's
sentimental "Estrellita," then a piece by Jules Massenet, and then
begins a Bach gavotte, a joyful, frolicsome, lyrical dance. It's got an Old
World delicacy to it; you can imagine it entertaining bewigged dancers at a
Versailles ball, or -- in a lute, fiddle and fife version -- the boot-kicking
peasants of a Pieter Bruegel painting.
Watching
the video weeks later, Bell finds himself mystified by one thing only. He
understands why he's not drawing a crowd, in the rush of a morning workday.
But: "I'm surprised at the number of people who don't pay attention at
all, as if I'm invisible. Because, you know what? I'm makin' a lot of noise!"
He is.
You don't need to know music at all to appreciate the simple fact that there's
a guy there, playing a violin that's throwing out a whole bucket of sound; at
times, Bell's bowing is so intricate that you seem to be hearing two
instruments playing in harmony. So those head-forward, quick-stepping passersby
are a remarkable phenomenon.
Bell
wonders whether their inattention may be deliberate: If you don't take visible
note of the musician, you don't have to feel guilty about not forking over money;
you're not complicit in a rip-off.
It may be
true, but no one gave that explanation. People just said they were busy, had
other things on their mind. Some who were on cellphones spoke louder as they
passed Bell, to compete with that infernal racket.
And then
there was Calvin Myint. Myint works for the General Services Administration. He
got to the top of the escalator, turned right and headed out a door to the
street. A few hours later, he had no memory that there had been a musician
anywhere in sight.
"Where
was he, in relation to me?"
"About
four feet away."
"Oh."
There's
nothing wrong with Myint's hearing. He had buds in his ear. He was listening to his iPod.
For many
of us, the explosion in technology has perversely limited, not expanded, our
exposure to new experiences. Increasingly, we get our news from sources that
think as we already do. And with iPods, we hear what we already know; we
program our own playlists.
The song
that Calvin Myint was listening to was "Just Like Heaven," by the
British rock band The Cure. It's a terrific song, actually. The meaning is a
little opaque, and the Web is filled with earnest efforts to deconstruct it.
Many are far-fetched, but some are right on point: It's about a tragic
emotional disconnect. A man has found the woman of his dreams but can't express
the depth of his feeling for her until she's gone. It's about failing to see
the beauty of what's plainly in front of your eyes.
"YES,
I SAW THE VIOLINIST," Jackie Hessian says, "but nothing about him
struck me as much of anything."
You
couldn't tell that by watching her. Hessian was one of those people who gave
Bell a long, hard look before walking on. It turns out that she wasn't noticing
the music at all.
"I
really didn't hear that much," she said. "I was just trying to figure
out what he was doing there, how does this work for him, can he make much
money, would it be better to start with some money in the case, or for it to be
empty, so people feel sorry for you? I was analyzing it financially."
What do
you do, Jackie?
"I'm
a lawyer in labor relations with the United States Postal Service. I just
negotiated a national contract."
THE BEST
SEATS IN THE HOUSE WERE UPHOLSTERED. In the balcony, more or less. On that day,
for $5, you'd get a lot more than just a nice shine on your shoes.
Only one
person occupied one of those seats when Bell played. Terence Holmes is a
consultant for the Department of Transportation, and he liked the music just
fine, but it was really about a shoeshine: "My father told me never to
wear a suit with your shoes not cleaned and shined."
Holmes
wears suits often, so he is up in that perch a lot, and he's got a good
relationship with the shoeshine lady. Holmes is a good tipper and a good
talker, which is a skill that came in handy that day. The shoeshine lady was
upset about something, and the music got her more upset. She complained, Holmes
said, that the music was too loud, and he tried to calm her down.
Edna
Souza is from Brazil. She's been shining shoes at L'Enfant Plaza for six years,
and she's had her fill of street musicians there; when they play, she can't
hear her customers, and that's bad for business. So she fights.
Souza
points to the dividing line between the Metro property, at the top of the
escalator, and the arcade, which is under control of the management company
that runs the mall. Sometimes, Souza says, a musician will stand on the Metro
side, sometimes on the mall side. Either way, she's got him. On her speed dial,
she has phone numbers for both the mall cops and the Metro cops. The musicians
seldom last long.
What
about Joshua Bell?
He was
too loud, too, Souza says. Then she looks down at her rag, sniffs. She hates to
say anything positive about these damned musicians, but: "He was pretty
good, that guy. It was the first time I didn't call the police."
Souza was
surprised to learn he was a famous musician, but not that people rushed blindly
by him. That, she said, was predictable. "If something like this happened
in Brazil, everyone would stand around to see. Not here."
Souza
nods sourly toward a spot near the top of the escalator: "Couple of
years ago, a homeless guy died right there. He just lay down there and died.
The police came, an ambulance came, and no one even stopped to see or slowed
down to look.
"People
walk up the escalator, they look straight ahead. Mind your own business, eyes
forward. Everyone is stressed. Do you know what
I mean?"
What is
this life if, full of care,
We have
no time to stand and stare.
-- from
"Leisure," by W.H. Davies
Let's say Kant is right. Let's accept that we can't look at what happened on
January 12 and make any judgment whatever about people's sophistication or
their ability to appreciate beauty. But what about their ability to appreciate
life?
We're
busy. Americans have been busy, as a people, since at least 1831, when a young
French sociologist named Alexis de Tocqueville visited the States and found
himself impressed, bemused and slightly dismayed at the degree to which people
were driven, to the exclusion of everything else, by hard work and the
accumulation of wealth.
Not much
has changed. Pop in a DVD of "Koyaanisqatsi," the wordless, darkly
brilliant, avant-garde 1982 film about the frenetic speed of modern life.
Backed by the minimalist music of Philip Glass, director Godfrey Reggio takes
film clips of Americans going about their daily business, but speeds them up
until they resemble assembly-line machines, robots marching lockstep to
nowhere. Now look at the video from L'Enfant Plaza, in fast-forward. The Philip
Glass soundtrack fits it perfectly.
"Koyaanisqatsi"
is a Hopi word. It means "life out of balance."
In his
2003 book, Timeless Beauty: In the Arts and Everyday Life, British author John
Lane writes about the loss of the appreciation for beauty in the modern world.
The experiment at L'Enfant Plaza may be symptomatic of that, he said -- not
because people didn't have the capacity to understand beauty, but because it
was irrelevant to them.
"This
is about having the wrong priorities," Lane said.
If we
can't take the time out of our lives to stay a moment and listen to one of the
best musicians on Earth play some of the best music ever written; if the surge
of modern life so overpowers us that we are deaf and blind to something like
that -- then what else are we missing?
That's
what the Welsh poet W.H. Davies meant in 1911 when he published those two lines
that begin this section. They made him famous. The thought was simple, even
primitive, but somehow no one had put it quite that way before.
Of
course, Davies had an advantage -- an advantage of perception. He wasn't a
tradesman or a laborer or a bureaucrat or a consultant or a policy analyst or a
labor lawyer or a program manager. He was a hobo.
THE
CULTURAL HERO OF THE DAY ARRIVED AT L'ENFANT PLAZA PRETTY LATE, in the
unprepossessing figure of one John Picarello, a smallish man with a baldish
head.
Picarello
hit the top of the escalator just after Bell began his final piece, a reprise
of "Chaconne." In the video, you see Picarello stop dead in his
tracks, locate the source of the music, and then retreat to the other end of
the arcade. He takes up a position past the shoeshine stand, across from that
lottery line, and he will not budge for the next nine minutes.
Like all
the passersby interviewed for this article, Picarello was stopped by a reporter
after he left the building, and was asked for his phone number. Like everyone,
he was told only that this was to be an article about commuting. When he was
called later in the day, like everyone else, he was first asked if anything
unusual had happened to him on his trip into work. Of the more than 40 people
contacted, Picarello was the only one who immediately mentioned the violinist.
"There
was a musician playing at the top of the escalator at L'Enfant Plaza."
Haven't
you seen musicians there before?
"Not
like this one."
What do
you mean?
"This
was a superb violinist. I've never heard anyone of that caliber. He was
technically proficient, with very good phrasing. He had a good fiddle, too,
with a big, lush sound. I walked a distance away, to hear him. I didn't want to
be intrusive on his space."
Really?
"Really.
It was that kind of experience. It was a treat, just a brilliant, incredible
way to start the day."
Picarello
knows classical music. He is a fan of Joshua Bell but didn't recognize him; he
hadn't seen a recent photo, and besides, for most of the time Picarello was
pretty far away. But he knew this was not a run-of-the-mill guy out there,
performing. On the video, you can see Picarello look around him now and then,
almost bewildered.
"Yeah,
other people just were not getting it. It just wasn't registering. That was
baffling to me."
When
Picarello was growing up in New York, he studied violin seriously, intending to
be a concert musician. But he gave it up at 18, when he decided he'd never be
good enough to make it pay. Life does that to you sometimes. Sometimes, you
have to do the prudent thing. So he went into another line of work. He's a
supervisor at the U.S. Postal Service. Doesn't play the violin much, anymore.
When he
left, Picarello says, "I humbly threw in $5." It was humble: You can
actually see that on the video. Picarello walks up, barely looking at Bell, and
tosses in the money. Then, as if embarrassed, he quickly walks away from the
man he once wanted to be.
Does he
have regrets about how things worked out?
The
postal supervisor considers this.
"No. If you love something but choose not
to do it professionally, it's not a waste. Because, you know, you still have
it. You have it forever."
BELL
THINKS HE DID HIS BEST WORK OF THE DAY IN THOSE FINAL FEW MINUTES, in the
second "Chaconne." And that also was the first time more than one
person at a time was listening. As Picarello stood in the back, Janice Olu
arrived and took up a position a few feet away from Bell. Olu, a public trust
officer with HUD, also played the violin as a kid. She didn't know the name of
the piece she was hearing, but she knew the man playing it has a gift.
Olu was
on a coffee break and stayed as long as she dared. As she turned to go, she
whispered to the stranger next to her, "I really don't want to
leave." The stranger standing next to her happened to be working for The
Washington Post.
In
preparing for this event, editors at The Post Magazine discussed how to deal
with likely outcomes. The most widely held assumption was that there could well
be a problem with crowd control: In a demographic as sophisticated as
Washington, the thinking went, several people would surely recognize Bell.
Nervous "what-if" scenarios abounded. As people gathered, what if
others stopped just to see what the attraction was? Word would spread through
the crowd. Cameras would flash. More people flock to the scene; rush-hour
pedestrian traffic backs up; tempers flare; the National Guard is called; tear
gas, rubber bullets, etc.
As it
happens, exactly one person recognized Bell, and she didn't arrive until near
the very end. For Stacy Furukawa, a demographer at the Commerce Department,
there was no doubt. She doesn't know much about classical music, but she had
been in the audience three weeks earlier, at Bell's free concert at the Library
of Congress. And here he was, the international virtuoso, sawing away, begging
for money. She had no idea what the heck was going on, but whatever it was, she
wasn't about to miss it.
Furukawa
positioned herself 10 feet away from Bell, front row, center. She had a huge
grin on her face. The grin, and Furukawa, remained planted in that spot until
the end.
"It
was the most astonishing thing I've ever seen in Washington," Furukawa
says. "Joshua Bell was standing there playing at rush hour, and people
were not stopping, and not even looking, and some were flipping quarters at
him! Quarters! I wouldn't do that to anybody. I was thinking, Omigosh, what
kind of a city do I live in that this could happen?"
When it
was over, Furukawa introduced herself to Bell, and tossed in a twenty. Not
counting that -- it was tainted by recognition -- the final haul for his 43
minutes of playing was $32.17. Yes, some people gave pennies.
"Actually,"
Bell said with a laugh, "that's not so bad, considering. That's 40 bucks
an hour. I could make an okay living doing this, and I wouldn't have to pay an
agent."
These
days, at L'Enfant Plaza, lotto ticket sales remain brisk. Musicians still show
up from time to time, and they still tick off Edna Souza. Joshua Bell's latest
album, "The Voice of the Violin," has received the usual critical
acclaim. ("Delicate urgency." "Masterful intimacy."
"Unfailingly exquisite." "A musical summit." ". . .
will make your heart thump and weep at the same time.")
Bell
headed off on a concert tour of European capitals. But he is back in the States
this week. He has to be. On Tuesday, he will be accepting the Avery Fisher
prize, recognizing the Flop of L'Enfant Plaza as the
best classical musician in
America.
Emily
Shroder, Rachel Manteuffel, John W. Poole and Magazine Editor Tom Shroder
contributed to this report. Gene Weingarten, a Magazine staff writer, can be
reached at weingarten@washpost.com. He will be fielding questions and comments
about this article Monday at 1 p.m.
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