We’ve at http://www.mirroroftomorrow.org/blog/_archives/2009/1/16/4058525.html
Joshua Bell’s true story regarding his Metro
Performance that is in circulation via e-mails. Here is the full account given
to us by the Washington Post Staff Writer Gene Weingarten in the Sunday, 8
April 2007 issue of the periodical. She asks the question “Can one of the nation's great musicians cut
through the fog of a D.C. rush hour?” and sets to discover the answer to it.
The complete report appears at:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/04/04/AR2007040401721.html?hpid=artslot
Joshua Bell’s full performance can be accessed here:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/video/2007/04/09/VI2007040900536.html
Audio: Listen to Joshua Bell's Complete Metro Station
Performance.
Can one of the
nation's great musicians cut through the fog of a D.C. rush hour? Let's find
out.
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
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
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,
"Here's what I'm
thinking,"
He smiled.
"…on Kreisler's violin."
It was a snazzy, sequined idea—part
inspiration and part gimmick—and it was typical of
When
"Uh, a stunt?"
Well, yes. A stunt. Would he think it . . . unseemly?
"Sounds like fun," he
said.
He's single and straight, a fact
not lost on some of his fans. In
For this incognito performance,
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—n elite, innate,
preternatural ability that manifests itself early, and often in dramatic
fashion.
One biographically intriguing fact
about
To get to the metro from his hotel,
a distance of three blocks,
"Our knowledge of acoustics is
still incomplete,"
The front of
"This has never been
refinished,"
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
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.
If
So, that's the piece
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,
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—hat 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,"
Playing the violin looks
all-consuming, mentally and physically, but
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."
"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,
"It wasn't exactly stage fright, but there were butterflies," he says. "I was stressing a little."
"When you play for
ticket-holders,"
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
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
"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
White guy, khakis, leather jacket,
briefcase. Early 30s. John David Mortensen is on the final leg of his daily
bus-to-Metro commute from
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
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
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."
So Parker does what she has to do.
She deftly moves her body between Evan's and
"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
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
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
Watching the video weeks later,
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,
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
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
"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
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
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
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
"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—hen 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
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
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
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."
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
As it happens, exactly one person
recognized
Furukawa positioned herself 10 feet
away from
"It was the most astonishing
thing I've ever seen in
When it was over, Furukawa
introduced herself to
"Actually,"
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.")
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.