Piano 21: Riverbank State Park - blue piano
Was able to take the day off work, so I planned out my piano journey. I decided to return to Riverbank State Park because I knew exactly where the unplayed piano was. When I arrived, a young girl was playing the piano. When she finished, I sat down and played "Nightminds" and then "Remember When It Rained," my first Josh Groban song for this art project. Toward the end of RWIR, two children -- one girl and one boy -- came up and listened to me play. The sheet music started to waver from the breeze, and all of a sudden an older woman (their grandmother, I presume) stepped behind the piano and held the music for me. I looked up at her and smiled. After I finished playing, we discussed the pianos a little bit. I asked her if she played. She answered that she took lessons over 50 years ago and joked that she couldn't even play scales now. I played one more song, "Arithmetic," and since it was still the morning, my voice hadn't fully warmed up yet, so I sang a softer version of the song -- closer to the way it was originally recorded by Brooke Fraser, actually. It was nice to give the song a more intimate feel, what with my audience of three standing right by the piano.
The girl who listened to me play Josh Groban and Brooke Fraser sat down to play after I finished. |
Got back on the 1 train, and it turned out it was going express to 96th Street, which worked to my advantage. At 96th, I transferred to the uptown 3 train and got off at 110th. Based on the Google map posted the Street Pianos website, I walked west after entering Central Park. I searched and searched for the piano. Based on pictures, I knew it was by the water, so then I started to circle Harlem Meer. It wasn't until I was halfway around the body of water that I heard the piano and spotted it across the way! It was to the east, not the west. I kept walking around Harlem Meer, but wow, it took much longer than I expected. If only the Google map were accurate in the first place...
I may have taken the long way 'round, but at least the view was gorgeous! |
Piano 23: Metropolitan Museum (Central Park: Cleopatra's Needle)
After eating my first-ever potato knish for lunch in Central Park, I took a bus down Fifth Avenue to the Met. Luckily, I had done my research on the Street Pianos website and learned that the piano at the Met was actually behind the museum and inside Central Park at a place called Cleopatra's Needle. I'd never heard of this place in Central Park, but it's an Egyptian obelisk. Very cool.
I let the sounds of the piano being played guide me and found my way. It was HOT and sunny, so I stood in the shade of the obelisk while the man before me played. He played a wide variety of songs, including "Maple Leaf Rag" (quite a popular tune for this art project), a fun ditty I didn't recognize, and Lady Gaga's "Bad Romance." He invited everyone to sing along, but I just listened.
I played "Arithmetic" from memory. One woman came up to the piano for my second and final song "Nightminds." After I finished, she said she didn't know the song, so I told her that it was written by Missy Higgins, a singer-songwriter from Australia. She said that my performance was a "spot-on interpretation and genuine." I was -- and still am -- so humbled by her kind words. I stayed to listen to the woman play a little bit, but it really was hot, so I moved on.
Piano 24: Central Park: Bandshell
Took another bus down Fifth Avenue for about 10 blocks and entered Central Park again at 72nd Street for my final Central Park piano at the Bandshell. It's funny, I wasn't quite sure where it was, but then when I looked at a map in the park, I saw that it was just south of Bethesda Fountain, which I've been to several times! I never knew they were so close to each other. I remember the Bandshell from walking in the Susan G. Komen Race for the Cure last September. Unfortunately, someone stole the bench at this piano. Terrible!
Love the decoration of this piano. |
Piano 25: Little Red Square at Bleecker Street and Sixth Avenue
After resting a bit in Central Park, I almost felt like calling it quits for the day, but another part of me felt the need to continue, so I took the local C train from 72nd and Central Park West all the way down to West 4th. And yes, I napped on the train. I found the piano at Little Red Square (never knew it was called that until this project), and there were some women sitting right by it. They didn't move when I played, but they didn't exactly look like they were paying attention either. I played "Arithmetic" followed by a decent attempt at "Anthem" from the musical Chess. It was slightly difficult to hear the piano, but I did OK. After I finished, a man sitting at a bench behind me requested "one more" song, so I played "Nightminds."
This is a picture of a picture of a cat resting on the piano. It was taped to the piano. |
My energy perked back up after playing at Little Red Square. I walked up Sixth Avenue and decided I would turn right onto West 8th Street. As luck would have it, there was a crosstown bus on 8th right as I turned the corner, so I rode it to the stop closest to Astor Place. There was a bit of a crowd there, so I decided to walk to St. Mark's Church. I had to wait a little bit, but it was nice to sit and rest. An elderly woman threw bread on the ground for the pigeons, and when they flocked to the carbs, it reminded me of Piazza San Marco in Venice. How fitting is it that there are pigeons at two places called San Marco / St. Mark's? Finally, the piano freed up, and I played "Arithmetic" and "Nightminds." A few people stopped to listen and then walked away.
The second player after my arrival at St. Mark's Church |
Piano 27: Tompkins Square Park
Luckily, it didn't take me to long to find the piano in the park. I was worried I wouldn't find it easily. I noticed one of the previous players from St. Mark's Church had just wowed the crowd and got up. People were taking turns, so a little boy played, followed by another man, then another, and then another.
Then, another guy was summoned back to the piano. He was very, very, very good! He could play a lot of popular (as in recognizable) music, including Neil Diamond and Billy Joel. He could play on request, such as songs by Ben Folds. There was a rousing version of "Army" sung by the crowd. If he didn't know a song from memory, he was very good at improvising. I was amazed. A skateboarder in the crowd requested "Imagine," and while the guy didn't truly know it, he was able to get the basic chords down, and he and the skateboarder did an improvised variation based on "Imagine" that transitioned into a sing-along for "Hey Jude." Several more songs were played until the talented guy's fingers started to bleed. He just said that he couldn't do more "glissandos" (I just looked it up, and technically, the plural is glissandi), but colloquially, "glissandos" sounded perfectly right to me! A violinist turned up to play and sing Johnny Cash's "Folsom Prison Blues" and "Ring of Fire" while he was accompanied by the popular piano player. A guitarist also stopped by to lend his support. The skateboarder borrowed the guitar, and they played an original song and also an improvised blues jam session. It was so amazing.
Fantastic Four: the pop piano player, the skateboarder, the violinist, the guitarist |
Total Pianos Played By Borough:
Manhattan: 25 pianos
Queens: 2 pianos
1 comment:
Random musos jamming along? *jealous jealous jealous*
Also, there is a 'Cleopatra's Needle' in London by the Thames that looks a lot like the one in your picture. They might even be twin.
I think some people respond to the song 'Arithmetic'. I played at a piano on Sunday while a guy (muso) was setting up for a performance later that day. He asked about Arithmetic in particular, and whether or not I was a writer. I like he liked the simple lyricism of it, and thought it sounded original.
So...when are you coming to London? :D
Post a Comment