Student admission ~$20 / 617-369-3300 / www.mfa.org
Devoted Hotspot reader – did you read the headline and go,
“buh?” I don’t blame you—we cover performance venues, and the Museum of
Fine Arts is known for its, like, paintings. But perhaps instead of
greedily devouring the Hotspot and then throwing the rest of Arts away,
you should read the other worthy offerings. Then you’d know there’s an
ongoing series of concerts at the museum. With music.
In fact, the program’s got so much indie/hipster cred that the
bookers must write for Pitchfork–past bands have included Belle
Orchestre and the Mountain Goats. The calendar also boasts stellar jazz
and classical offerings.
Hotspot headed to a show featuring the eminently huggable
Isobel Campbell, whose cello and wispy soprano voice left Belle and
Sebastian a couple albums back.
After she bopped through a few dreamy songs, Campbell looked
around the hall in amazement–as if she hadn’t yet seen the place
through her blond bangs.
“It’s like playing in my front room!” she said. “Where we
played last night, people were drunk and yelling. This is so
different!”
Indeed–though it took some getting used to. The MFA’s theatre
is basically a clean, white lecture hall with a stage at the bottom.
The sound system is very good, but won’t exactly vibrate your sternum.
In a way, the concert was like a high-end high school assembly.
But I mean that in a good way. True, it’s not an intimate
venue, and doesn’t offer the communal experience of dancing (or
swaying) with fellow concertgoers. Like the paintings and sculptures in
the rest of the building, the MFA’s concert series fosters private
appreciation of art. The artists–here, musicians–have the freedom to
create their music without the distraction of rowdy, drunken crowds
pressing up to the stage. It’s almost a live performance in a vacuum.
While I tend to prefer the traditional, sweaty,
push-your-way-to-the-front experience when it comes to live rock, the
people who pick the MFA shows understand that they’re not running a
mosh pit. The mellower music on the calendar tends to be a perfect fit
for the more sedate setting.
I’d give the MFA an unreserved thumbs-up, if not for ticket
prices hovering at around $20 for a reduced-price student admission.
That’s a bit high, especially since the MFA isn’t shackled to the
Ticketmaster ball-and-chain.
Still, it’s a high-quality venue, and if you’re a fan of
anyone on the concert calendar you’ll appreciate the refined,
distraction-free setting that the MFA offers.
Read more in Arts
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