
COVID Concerts-
Coping with streaming concerts in the lockdown era
The Merced Symphony Association posted a holiday concert to YouTube in late December. Portions of the concert, including this scene pictured, originated from the First Presbyterian Church of Oakland. Photo: Merced Symphony Association.
My wife and I were not big concert goers.
If we got out to an occasional Playhouse Merced community theater production or even a rare music performance at the Gallo Center in Modesto we consider ourselves lucky.
Like many people before March 2020, we took a lot of things for granted.
COVID 19 changed all that.
The virus altered everything. Face masks, social distancing, hand sanitizer, health department guidelines, vaccine wait lists, and the list goes on.
Add enjoying live music to that list.
I don’t mean the YouTube videos and Facebook concerts we’ve been seeing. They are fine, but nothing will replace being in the concert space as the music happens.
The Grand Ole Opry was the first to engage fans with live streaming concerts at the start of the COVID lockdown. Live weekly concerts have been streamed on Facebook since the start of the lockdown. Photo: Grand Ole Opry
In Nashville, Tennessee, the country music showcase Grand Ole Opry started streaming one-hour weekly concerts as soon as the crisis started in March 2020.
The shows were presented with the blessing of the local health department and that included no in-person audience at first as well as other COVID protocols.
The Opry prides itself on holding consecutive weekly shows since 1925. The Opry had a tradition to keep up. The weekly concerts have been broadcast on radio station WSM every week for ninety-five years.
The group Ellas will be performing live via live stream on January 29 as part of the UC Merced upSTART series.
Besides helping us remain safe by keeping us away from public venues, the move to streaming performances has provided other benefits.
Shows on social media sites allow viewers to comment as the performance takes place; providing instant feedback and a sense of shared experience.
Being able to pause to tend to an interruption is nice. There’s no need to dress up for the show. There’s also no chance of being annoyed by a rude attendee who either talks, texts, or gets up from their seat during the performance.
But I’m willing to accept some of those annoyances in exchange for having live music where I can be part of the audience in person.
It may take a little while longer for those days to return, but we are patient.
Once live in-person performances resume, I promise myself never to take them for granted.
Steve Newvine lives in Merced.
His new book Can Do Californians is available at barnesandnoble.com and at lulu.com
Dave’s Record Collection-
Father-in-law’s love for jazz lives on
Some of the music in my father-in-law’s collection. Photo: Newvine Family Collection
Three years ago, my father-in-law, Dave passed shortly before turning ninety-one.
He had a successful career, a prosperous retirement, and a devoted family. One of the blessings in my life was opening our home to my in-laws for these past few years.
Dave may have left but his love of music is still with us. He had acquired an impressive collection of long-playing records, cassette tapes, and compact discs.
With thanks to David Letterman’s writers who came up with the title of this column (named after a comedy bit on Letterman’s old talk show), here are some of the highlights from my father-in-law’s music collection:
Dave’s collection includes several discs from guitarists Tony Mattola and Chet Atkins. Photo: Newvine Family Collection.
Guitar players
Dave had three records and two compact discs of Tony Mattola. Tony backed up some of the finest singers of the Great American Songbook.
I saw him perform a duet with Sinatra in Las Vegas back in 1982. The solo works are glorious in their simplicity of arrangements mixed with the complicated fingerings of this master.
Chet Atkins was known primarily as a country guitarist, but he had an amazing career producing country singers for RCA Records in Nashville.
His guitar solos are featured in some of Elvis Presley’s early recordings (listen for it in the instrumental bridge of Hound Dog among others).
There’s a story I found in a book by Ralph Emery that recounts how Chet created instrumental acts at RCA primarily to keep the musicians he used in recording sessions working.
He was considered a musician’s musician and was widely respected in the industry.
The Singers
Dave was not a fan of my two favorite pop singers: Frank Sinatra and Tony Bennett. But he did appreciate the stylings of Ella Fitzgerald and Mel Torme. Both are well represented in his music collection.
The Bands
Most prominent throughout Dave’s collection are albums, compact discs, and tape recordings of jazz bands and swing orchestras. He turned me on to Count Basie back in the early eighties, and his collection shows that he tried to assemble as much of the Count’s music as he could.
The Duke Ellington and Stan Kenton orchestras frequently pop up among the tapes, as well as more contemporary groups such as Spyro Gyra and the Chuck Magione band.
In the home he owned until moving in with us, he liked to crank up the volume on his Bose music system. One of the first purchases made for him upon taking up residence in California was a set of headphones.
Over the past two years, I have occasionally transferred the audiotapes and vinyl recordings to digital.
I enjoy the music, and I appreciate the connection it gives me to the man who acquired it all for about seventy years.
My father-in-law, the late H. David Trautlein. Photo: Newvine Personal Collection.
One of Dave’s other hobbies was fishing. He enjoyed the solitude of fishing among many of New York’s lakes. I’d wager he would be listening to his music on the car stereo traveling to and from his favorite fishing spots.
Just as the memories of the jazz greats such as Oscar Peterson, Lionel Hampton, and Dave Brubeck live on through their music, the legacy of my father-in-law lives on within me through the music he collected.
Steve Newvine lives in Merced.
His book Can Do Californians is available at BarnesandNoble.com and at Lulu.com
To explore Steve Newvine's complete collection of books, simply click on the link below.
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Steve is also open to delivering speeches for service club programs and other public speaking engagements.
Contact him at: SteveNewvine@sbcglobal.net