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.
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?
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