Bach Yard

GetClassical reviews Bach Yard at Merkin Hall

by Ilona Oltuski

An interactive musical show for kids, accompanied by their parents, Bach Yard encourages to share the joy of music with young kids, exploring a shared listening experience. Youngsters are introduced to that experience at Merkin Hall, where they are familiarized with different instruments, musical jargon and concert behavior, while acknowledging age appropriate attention span.

Originally coined Baby’s got Bach, with performances at LPR and the 92nd Street Y, the concept of the show (founded in 2010)  has expanded its reach into a well visited communal outreach program for young kids and their parents, offering a lovely introduction to classical music to with series at Rochester, Princeton, and Kaufman Centers’  Merkin Hall’s youngest audiences, pre-k to early lower school ages.

With the participation of young “performers,” from the center’s own Special Music School, and Carnegie Hall’s educational outreach Ensemble Connect, the show also potentially attracts newcomers to the center’s diverse educational programs, like its Special Music School or the Lucy Moses School afternoon programs.

Recently named NPR’s From the Top talent show Regular Guest Host and Creative, Shaham offers a strong presence as an accomplished international concert pianist, which she combines adequately with her extensive experience as an educator and her personal one, as a mother. Shaham also took the opportunity to personally connect with the kids, sharing that she was born in Jerusalem and only later became a New Yorker.

With great authority, she leads kids’ attention – and recognizing the lack thereof – with ample story time interactions, were kids are encouraged to move along with the storyline’s musical characters. A train ride that stops and has the kids stand up, following their musical’s station’s characteristic movements, to partake in a fiesta, a carousel ride and a marching band, inspire kids to actively identify music’s components, moods and tempi.

Incidentally, not all musical works – as the title may suggest – featured works by Bach. While Sunday’s show had kids immersed into works by Bach and Mozart, it also incorporated contemporary works by Avner Dorman, Arthur Honegger and Beata Moon.

Kids were also introduced to the concept of music composition, by becoming composers themselves in a playful activity, prior to the show on stage. Part of this orientation included blowing air through a straw, to visibly move little objects, as an introduction to the show’s instrumental zoo project, in this installment focused on wood wings.

Musicians from Ensemble Connect, then presented the different personal voices of their instruments, oboe, horn, flute, bassoon, and clarinet on stage. Pointing out that different voices are hard to be heard together, except when composed for different instruments, Shaham let the kids scream their name all together, then whisper, then had the instruments collaborate.  Especially original was Shaham’s demonstration of the inner workings of instrumental sound with the help of a garden hose, symbolizing the horn’s untangled channels to its full length and powerful transmission of sound. Always making it easy for kids to connect their real-life experiences, to a specific experience in music, Shaham pointed out that every family member’s voice sounds different, with the tallest person having the deepest voice, when comparing the bassoon to the oboe. Some of the performers were dressed up, to portray different story characters, but while the music performances were all excellent, it all had more in common with the improvisational and low-key spirit of a summer camp slumber party, than a Broadway spectacle.

Directing kids throughout the different activity stations, the concert had started a little late but had a largely uninterrupted flow. Once, when things got a little loud, Shaham, while at the piano, encouraged parents to take kids that needed a break, out of the hall and return at a later point.

Only at the end, when all kids got invited to join Special Music School kids for a “performance” on stage, did it become clear that not all parents’ ambitions were limited to a wholesome afternoon of musical exploration. Ambitiously heaving their kids onto the stage, parents got excited about their kids’ exposure to yet another ingredient of the world of music, the attraction to a little bit of the stage’s star dust.

Shaham’s next Bach Yard at Merkin Hall, Spring Strings, will focus on the family of string instruments.

Bach Yard Playdates with Pianist Orli Shaham

On April 26, 2020, Orli Shaham’s Bach Yard launches a brand-new series: Bach Yard Playdates. Playdates introduces musical concepts, instruments and the experience of concert-going to a global audience of children and their families, in weekly 5 to 10-minute episodes. Kaufman Music Center presents Bach Yard Playdates, and it will appear on their website and social media channels at 11:00 am EDT Sundays through mid-August.

Season 1's ten episodes include interactive music in which children can join in from home, storytimes, and musical selections designed to develop listening skills. Orli Shaham introduces each show, and is joined by guest musicians from Carnegie Hall’s Ensemble Connect, The Westerlies and other professional musicians for the performances. This series is especially for children up to early elementary, but every member of the household – human or animal, stuffed, or not - will enjoy this fun and unique series.

The Bach Yard Playdates series begins with "Dancing with Bach" and continues with “Curious Engine”, an interactive story that will have children marching and dancing to music by Beata Moon. In future episodes, Orli narrates two original stories: the “Dance of the Goat” with music by Arthur Honegger, and “The Trout Family’s New Friend” with music by Franz Schubert.

Taking Bach Yard to the airwaves, WQXR-FM invited Orli Shaham to create and host a radio series of original stories with classical music for children. Orli Shaham’s Bach Yard for radio was broadcast on WQXR-FM in November and December 2019. You can listen to all four Bach Yard stories over and over again, at WQXR.org.

New! Pianist Orli Shaham's Bach Yard airs on WQXR-FM, Saturday mornings, November 30 - December 21, 2019

As Orli Shaham’s Bach Yard prepares for its 10th season of live interactive concerts in New York and Princeton, we’re proud to announce WQXR radio as a new platform for Bach Yard.

Orli Shaham’s stories illustrated by classical music are one of the most popular components of Bach Yard interactive concerts for young children. WQXR-FM has invited Ms. Shaham to create and host a series of these original stories with classical music designed especially for radio.

Orli Shaham’s Bach Yard for radio will air on WQXR, 105.9 FM and WQXR.org Saturday mornings at 8:00 am EST, November 30 through December 21, 2019. A different five-minute episode airs each week.  You and your children will be entertained by The Trout Family's New Friend, Belinda and Charlie's Big Day and other tales written by Orli, along with music by Handel, Schubert and more.

Orli Shaham's Bach Yard, the live interactive concert series of the same name will be performed at Merkin Hall in New York on February 23 and April 26, 2020, and at Princeton University on March 14, 2020, with Orli as host and pianist. Check out BachYard.org for details about these and other performances, as well as fun activities to do at home with your little Maestro.

Orli Shaham's Bach Yard – formerly Baby Got Bach – is proud to announce its Spring 2020 Season!

Orli Shaham’s Bach Yard performs

new interactive concerts in association

with Ensemble Connect

Performances on February 23 and

April 26 at Merkin Hall in New York City

and on March 14 at Princeton University

“I LOVED that you really taught the kids stuff. My child was TOTALLY ENTHRALLED. So smart. Well done!!” - parent testimonial

Orli Shaham’s interactive concert series for kids, Baby Got Bach has a new name - Orli Shaham's Bach Yard – and an expanded program. Bach Yard combines live ensemble performances with storytelling, costumed musicians, and a host of activities in which children can take part. The interactive concerts introduce musical concepts, instruments and the experience of concert-going to children age pre-Kindergarten to early elementary.

The concert pianist Orli Shaham performs with orchestras and in recitals around the world. As the interactive concert series for children that she founded developed and grew, it became clear that a new name was in order. “Since our live concert series is aimed toward pre-kindergarten through early elementary age children, we decided that the name “Bach Yard” was much more descriptive and appropriate,” said Ms. Shaham. Thus, Orli Shaham’s Bach Yard (“OSBY” for short) was born.

Orli Shaham's Bach Yard: Spring 2020 Season

Sunday, February 23, 2020, 10:30 am: Winter Winds at Merkin Hall - presented by Kaufman Music Center, in association with Ensemble Connect - New York, NY

Saturday, March 14, 1:00 pm: Welcome the Winds! At Princeton University Concerts, in association with Ensemble Connect - Princeton, NJ

Sunday, April 26, 10:30 pm: Spring Strings at Merkin Hall - presented by Kaufman Music Center, in association with Ensemble Connect - New York, NY

GUEST PERFORMERS: ENSEMBLE CONNECT

Orli Shaham’s Bach Yard is excited to present new interactive concerts in association with Ensemble Connect, the fellowship program created by Carnegie Hall, The Juilliard School, and the Weill Music Institute in partnership with the New York City Department of Education. This ensemble is made up of the finest young professional classical musicians who combine musical excellence with teaching, community engagement, advocacy, entrepreneurship, and leadership. Read more about Ensemble Connect at this link.

“We are beyond thrilled to be collaborating with Ensemble Connect,” said Orli Shaham. “I have worked with these fine musicians for a number of years in various capacities, and I have found them to be the most engaging and talented performing artists around.”

American-Israel Cultural Foundation features Orli Shaham's Bach Yard

‘Bach Yard’: Orli Shaham’s ‘Baby Got Bach’ Has New Name

Orli Shaham’s interactive concert series for kids, ‘Baby Got Bach’ has a new name – Orli Shaham’s Bach Yard – and an expanded program. ‘Bach Yard’ combines live ensemble performances with storytelling, costumed musicians, and a host of activities in which children can take part. The interactive concerts introduce musical concepts, instruments and the experience of concert-going to children age pre-Kindergarten to early elementary.

The internationally renowned concert pianist and mother of twin boys, Orli Shaham launched Baby Got Bach in 2010, bringing live interactive concerts to thousands of young children and their parents. Now with an expanded age range, a new location for performances at Merkin Hall at Kaufman Music Center, and educational and community outreach, Orli Shaham’s Bach Yard will introduce many more young ears to live classical music.