encore
Excerpted from Strings magazine, November/December 2002, No. 106.

 


BACH ON TAP: Due to popular demand, Matt Haimovitz has extended his Bach Listening Room tour into 2003.

 

 


Change of Venue

Matt Haimovitz gets Bach
where he belongs

by David Templeton


It's a barn. The Palms—a legendary music venue in Davis, California—is exactly that, a barn: a creaky, wooden structure with a soaring roof, knotty walls, and corrugated-tin siding. A ruined tractor sits rusting in the dirt outside the massive main entrance. The interior—noisy with preshow chatter—is decorated with horseshoes and pictures of boots, and holds about 125 folding wooden seats, all facing a tiny fabric-backed stage. Two barn doors, on either side of the building, stand wide open, allowing a gentle breeze—refreshingly cool and long-overdue—to blow in across the wilting audience; though it's just before sunset, the rural town of Davis—located 11 miles west of Sacramento, in the middle of California's sweltering Central Valley—is still a hot-and-sticky 80 degrees.

It's even warmer inside where the music is.

Primarily identified with such folk and traditional acts as fiddlers Laurie Lewis and Sourdough Slim, the Palms is playing host tonight to renowned 32-year-old cellist Matt Haimovitz, the Israeli-born wunderkind who's earned a reputation as one of the most exciting, unpredictable classical musicians to grace the concert halls of the world—or for that matter, the barns of California. Tonight, he's performing the first three suites for unaccompanied cello by Johann Sebastian Bach.

The place is packed.

"This is a treat, to have such a turnout," says the ponytailed, casually dressed Haimovitz, addressing the mesmerized crowd between the first and second suites. "Thanks to the Palms for trying something different . . . and thanks to you for welcoming the Bach."

If an overheated cow house seems an unlikely location in which to hear the music of Bach, just consider the venue Haimovitz played two nights earlier. The Mint, a fabled rock 'n' roll supper club in a rough neighborhood of Los Angeles dotted with tattoo parlors, was similarly sold out when Haimovitz played the Bach suites, as the opening act for scary Irish Goth-rocker Noella Hutton. Previous to that gig, Haimovitz played for the beautiful people at Club Passim, a veggie-burger coffeehouse in Cambridge, Massachusetts; the Ram's Head Tavern in Annapolis; the Tin Angel in Philadelphia, and a place called Oddfella's Cantina in Floyd, Virginia. While certainly not Carnegie Hall—Haimovitz played that at age 13—such pointedly nonclassical venues are exactly the point of this unusual cross-country tour, which Haimovitz has playfully dubbed the Bach Listening Room Tour.

It all began a couple of years ago, after Haimovitz recorded a three-CD set of all six Bach cello suites (Oxingale Records OX2000). As an experiment, he staged a performance at Joe's Pub, near his home in Northampton, Massachusetts, playing all six suites. The response was electric. "I felt like I'd struck a nerve," Haimovitz says, gobbling a cheeseburger at an In-N-Out Burger after the Palms show, while his 292-year-old Matteo Goffiller cello takes up an entire seat beside him. "I started wondering if there was a need for this in other parts of the country."

While the settings he chooses are certainly unconventional for a classical performer, what's equally jarring about them is Haimovitz' laid-back demeanor during the shows. In a concert hall, a musician would rarely dare to chat up his audience between musical selections, tell jokes, share personal insights, or offer Henry Kissinger impersonations. Haimovitz does it all. And it's all part of his plan to break up the routine that distances so many people from classical music—the very same people who show up to hear Haimovitz play Bach in a barn or a rock club or the neighborhood bar.

"Bach did not write for the music hall," says Haimovitz, "Bach wrote for people. Musically, I'm not sacrificing a single thing. I'm not taking out a single repeat. I may be taking Bach out of the concert hall, but I'm certainly not dumbing him down or selling him out."

On the contrary, and to his agent's chagrin, Haimovitz could be making a lot more money playing in the traditional halls, instead of tooling around the country in his hybrid-electric car, playing tiny taverns, and selling CDs out of his trunk. "For me," he explains, "this is not only a musical adventure—it's a life adventure. By taking these pieces into these odd venues, I am finding new meanings in the music in each place I play. I feel like I'm getting closer to the core spontaneity of Bach."

He may also be starting a revolution; with the success and popularity and national press attention his appearances have garnered, there is talk that other major classical musicians may be planning to try the same thing. Haimovitz hopes it happens. "The problem with classical music," he says, "is this fear we all have of degrading beautiful music. But if you are open to it, not only do you not degrade the music, you end up honoring it."


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