Our last full day on tour. A soggy one. There
are rumors of being held over due to popular demand. We’ll let you know
but there have been 2,258 people who have attended Boychoir performances this
week and they are spreading the word. If we are held over, an email will
be sent to parents letting you know when your sons will be home. The
first event for the boys was the White House tour. As with the naval base
no pictures were allowed. Again we successfully passed through
security, this time while standing in the rain. Our apologies to Barack
and Michelle for dripping on their carpet. From the White House we went
to the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum. The boys explored the
museum, some of whom would like to be aerospace engineers. It doesn’t get
any better for them. Next up lunch at the Museum of Natural
History. A little shopping and exhibit review then we were surfing
through the flash flooding streets to the National Cathedral. What an
amazing space. The columns, stained glass, wood and stone carved arcs and
its size were awe inspiring. The boys performed two impromptu
songs. The expressions on the faces of those who didn’t know what was
about to happen was jaw dropping. People streamed into the chapel as they
heard the music. The smiles on the boy’s faces said “This is what we do” https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w-MWwKwz89I .
We then traveled to the Crossway Community Center, a non-profit dedicated to
battered women and children, where the boys inaugurated the old gymnasium that
had changed into an arts center. It was a fun concert, the audience had a lot
of energy (a few were especially cute).
After the performance the boys
expressed their appreciation to Al and Joe, our drivers for their good humor
and safe driving. We went back to the
hotel and prepared to leave. It has been
a joy and privilege being with these boys this week. They know they effect people and they know
the Minnesota Boychoir is good. They
probably don’t know the magnitude of their awesomeness as performers and as
human beings. Good job to those who
raised them and to Mark and Todd who teach them. Brenda there was a hole in the choir this
week. You were missed.
Sunday, June 28, 2015
Saturday, June 27, 2015
East Coast Tour Day 8
We left Fredericksburg and got to Walter Reed National
Military Medical Center with time to spare.
The first thing we saw was a deer peacefully walking the grounds. The deer was seen again trying to visit
patients. We successfully made it
through security and met the Lt Commander in charge of Child Psychology and
base entertainment visits. He made sure
we knew what a healing effect music has on patients. It helps them forget the bad times and
remember the good. The boys sang 10 or
so songs. “Tell My Father” was a particularly
beautiful and poignant one and almost impossible to not hold back tears. There was some excitement as well when we
were told to evacuate due to a fire threat and we saw how quickly and
professionally the fire crew jumps into action.
Ultimately there was no fire and the first responders packed up as
quickly as they came. We drove to the
U.S. Capital building. The dome is going
through the first major restoration of the exterior in over 100 years. They are removing oxidation and attempting to
finish it by the time the 2016 elections get into full swing. We met our tour guides there and drove around
Washington. We drove along the Mall,
stopped at the Lincoln Memorial then Arlington National Cemetery. There was a lot of traffic due to rush hour
so we didn’t get the time we’d hoped to, but we did see the changing of the
guard. Those soldiers are precise in
their marching and arms presentation.
You can see and sense the honor they feel being able to march back and
forth in front of an unknown fallen comrade.
For Cantabile it was back to the hotel for pizza, cake and ice
cream. Allegro went on to the Kennedy
Center for the Performing Arts. They watched a brief concert, played some Frisbee
outside, and then went up to the terrace.
On top of the terrace they sang and watched as President Obama returned
to the White House on Marine 1 after delivering his eulogy in Charlotte. Allegro
can now say they have sung at Kennedy Center. It was Allegro Night Out so they
went to the Shake Shack near Dupont Circle.
They gorged themselves on all you can eat food and dessert. It was a short walk back to the hotel and a
rest well deserved. Tomorrow the White
House, the Smithsonian Museums and more.
Thursday, June 25, 2015
East Coast Tour Day 7
The boys were up and ready to go even though it was an early
start. We drove for about 45 minutes and
hopped on a trolley for a tour of historic Fredericksburg, VA. We were shown where George Washington and his
family lived when he was 6. Saw numerous homes and buildings of historic
significance primarily because of their age, some having been built in the 1720’s. This was more than a civil war history
tour. Fredericksburg is rich in pre-Revolutionary
War history. Fredericksburg is antique
shop heaven and offers a variety of antiquities to choose from. The boys were able to explore the shops for
about 45 minutes in between lunch, battlefield tours and learning about
Apothecary. The Battle of Fredericksburg
involved more soldiers than any battle in the Civil War. There are 18,000 soldiers buried in the
National Cemetery there, most with no name.
From a Union perspective this battle was a disaster. We took a walking tour of the Sunken Road
which meandered along a path behind a rock wall the Confederate soldiers laid
behind as the Union soldiers tried numerous times, unsuccessfully, to take the
high ground. This was a living history
experience that may take the boys awhile to absorb but one they will probably ever
forget. We learned about medical history
through the Apothecary presentation where the boys had numerous questions about
leaches, how water was filtered through soap stone to produce purity and other
methods of healing and treatments. They
were asked the difference between leaches found in a lake and those used in
Apothecary. The answer was the
Apothecary leaches are trained. We left
historic Fredericksburg and checked into the hotel with an hour to spare before
busing off to the performance at Fredericksburg United Methodist Church. They rehearsed and were served a Mexican
dinner. The performance in front of
about 180 people live and many more through streaming video was great. We mingled afterward over cookies, water and punch
before heading back to the hotel for sleep.
It’s off to Washington DC in the morning where the boys will most certainly
rock the nation’s capital.
East Coast Tour Day 6
Mark and Mike went to the ABC affiliate WTVR with 20 plus Cantabile
boys. The rock stars showed Richmond
what the Boychoir is all about on “Virginia This Morning”. They looked great and sounded great. They also saw how Richmond makes a 2.5 foot
high hamburger. It helps to have a guy
like Mike around to grease the wheels in the TV world. They also recorded a
holiday song to be used this coming holiday season in Richmond. The rest of the choir went to the Museum of
the Confederacy. The museum sat next to
the White House of the south and divided itself into three areas; how the Civil
War effected civilians, artifacts from the period, and art. There was a picture of Robert E. Lee and
Stonewall Jackson meeting on horseback just before the battle at Chancellorsville
where Jackson was mortally wounded (see Day 2 blog for more details). They had a mural of Lee’s headquarters tent
with the actual items he used including boots, bed, silver eating utensils and
plates. The morning was cool and breezy,
a welcome change from the last few days of hot sun and humidity. So we walked to the State Capital, saw a
beautiful sculpture of George Washington and then down to Brown’s Island where
we had sandwiches and sat on the bank of the James River. It was the mouth of the James River where the
famous Battle of the Monitor and Merrimack took place. Next we visited the American Civil War
Museum. It was part of a historical site
that included the Tredegar Iron Works, the largest munitions, steel and
fabricating factory in the south. This
museum’s focus is on presenting a balance between the Confederacy, Union and
African American perspectives of what built up to, happened during and what the
continuing results of the Civil War are.
One of the highlights was learning how to fire a muzzle loading
cannon. After a couple of “deaths”
because of poor loading techniques the participants were able to simulate the
firing in less than 30 seconds. We went
back to the hotel for some rest before going to the Cathedral of the Sacred
Heart for the performance. This was a
spectacular church. Historically we
learned that it is the only church in the world where one person wrote one
check and paid for the entire church.
The benefactor wanted it to be acoustically state of the art and it
was. After rehearsal we were treated to
a dinner prepared by a chef and our waiters were from the Knights of
Columbus. They also gave us an ice cream
social outside the church after the performance that was a wonderful surprise
for the boys. The concert was live
streamed, something we will be doing more of as we perfect the process. There was a very large audience for a
Wednesday night. The boys filled the
huge space with their music and received the praise and congratulations we
regularly see after performances. Back
to the hotel, a little swim, and snack then off to bed for a 6:15 wakeup call.
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