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Austin360 blogs > Austin Arts: Seeing Things > Archives > 2009 > March > 31 > Entry

Bach rocks the Blanton

It was standing room only today in the atrium of the Blanton Museum of Art for Bach Cantata Project. About a couple of hundred people turned out for the monthly noontime concert series.

People stood on the stairs, leaned over from mezzanine and listened appreciatively to the 30-minute ‘Palm Sunday Cantata.’

And while I didn’t luck out and get a seat (I stood in the back, hence the long-shot picture), I did score with two of my favorite young singers — mezzo-soprano Elizabeth Petillot and bass Phillip Hill — featured as soloists. Both sang wonderfully, and the soaring Blanton atrium has a bit of a cathedral-like sound.

UT professor James Morrow started the Bach Cantata Project when the Blanton opened three years ago. About 200 of Bach’s cantatas survive today, which scholars estimate is about three-fifths of the total number the Baroque composer is thought to have composed.

Now, Morrow and a changing ensemble of singers and instrumentalists (from UT and beyond), present a different Bach cantata on the last Tuesday at the month. Since it launched, the Project has become incredibly popular, each concert drawing a healthy-sized audience.

What gives? Why is this noontime concert series so popular?

It’s glorious music for one thing, smartly performed in an historically accurate manner.

But the Bach Cantata Project also dovetails into how people want to consume culture in the 21st century.

Although it is a lunchtime series, that actually works well for many working people who have to juggle lots of evening and weekend commitments. The low ticket price (free with museum admission of $3-$7) makes it a bargain. You get a lot of bang — or Bach — for your buck: both a concert and a visit to the museum.

Finally, with just one cantata performed (and most are 25-40 minutes max), these concerts are accessible for people with over-busy schedules. Would that everyone have the two hours plus that’s required for most classical music concerts (really an entire evening is required). Bbut that’s not always the case. And there’s plenty of other culture out there — much of it more flexible in reach — to compete with those evening-long concerts.

Imagine: historically accurate Baroque Bach, re-shaped to fit into the 21t-century.

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By elizabeth petillot

April 2, 2009 9:07 AM | Link to this

Thanks for the nod Jeanne Claire. I saw you way back there, sorry I didn’t get a chance to say hello before everyone dispersed. Catch you at Dialogues? Yours, Elizabeth

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