Recordings of concert intermissions:
David Pescovitz:
“Favorite Intermissions: Music Before and Between Beethoven, Stravisnky, Holst” is a collection of the ambient intermission sounds–murmurs, coughs, tuning, musical warm-ups–before and after orchestral performances. John Cage would be proud. The compiler, sound artist Christopher DeLaurenti, bootlegged the recordings while attending concerts for seven years. This is his greatest hits from more than 50 recorded hours, presented in 3D binaural audio. John Cage would be proud. From the New York Times, where you can also hear selections from the CD:
“Every composer, every sound artist, every musician, poses a fundamental question to everyone else,†Mr. DeLaurenti said in an interview. “It’s a request to listen. I have faith that in any sound or collection of sounds, music lies therein.
“It does sound crazy,†he continued. “Craziness is the root of many great musical ideas and the source for new ways of listening and considering the world around us…”
Virtually all concert halls ban photography or recording, and contracts with musicians’ unions strictly govern what can be preserved, so Mr. DeLaurenti had to go under cover. He said he was never caught but occasionally drew suspicious looks from ushers.
He honed a technique of often shifting his posture and moving around. “Most people are not observant and rarely look at one thing for longer than 10 seconds,†he said. He also showed unfailing courtesy when questioned. “People don’t want trouble,†he explained.