By Nelson Hernandez
Washington Post Staff Writer
Friday, April 18, 2008
If music hath charms to soothe the savage breast, as the English dramatist William Congreve wrote about three centuries ago, yesterday it did something even more remarkable: It quieted a concert hall packed with 2,500 fourth-graders.
The young students, vibrating with energy, were from Prince George's County. For the first time, the county has sent all of its fourth-graders to a series of concerts at the Kennedy Center this week in a partnership with the National Symphony Orchestra.
All meaning 8,000.
Before the concert began, the students were making music of their own. After leaving scores of school buses waiting outside in the parking lot, the students marveled at the center's flag-draped Hall of Nations. One group of seven singing girls from Port Towns Elementary School in Bladensburg, holding hands in a circle, played a clapping game in time with a ditty about "The Simpsons."
Derick Johnson, 10, was there with the girls. He likes dancing, he said, and his favorite music is hip-hop. But he has a soft spot in his heart for classical music, too.
"I really like Beethoven," Derick said. Part of the appeal was how the young composer overcame difficult circumstances. "His dad was an alcoholic. He would always get punched, kicked, beat if he messed up" while playing the piano, Derick said gravely.
Asked whether he had heard of Mozart, Derick shook his head.
Derick's was not a unique response. With an increasing national focus on passing tests in reading and math, the amount of time spent in school studying the arts, as well as science and social studies, has declined. So Emil de Cou, the associate conductor for the National Symphony Orchestra, was understandably enthusiastic about the opportunity to expose young people to the arts.
"I have yet to meet a teacher who thinks excluding the arts is a good idea," de Cou said. "If you just memorize facts and figures and numbers, you're not contributing to society. You're a maker of widgets." The arts, he said, "can be a divine spark that grows."
The students, most in school uniforms but many wearing suits or dresses, were at full boil as they filed into the concert hall and found their seats.
The noise of a thousand conversations stopped when the lights grew dim, and the children cheered. The few stragglers who continued talking were cut off by a chorus of students and teachers hissing, "Shhh!"
De Cou outlined the concert: "The Sounds of Time," a survey of 400 years of orchestral music from George Frideric Handel to John Williams. Then a performer played "Greensleeves" on a recorder.
As the short pieces moved from the baroque sound of Handel's "Royal Fireworks" to the bouncing rhythms of Beethoven's Symphony No. 7 to more modern excerpts from the video game EverQuest II and a piece from a Harry Potter film, the students responded in a variety of ways, most of them somewhat unorthodox in the often solemn world of symphonic music.
Some nodded their heads or even gyrated in time with the beat. One boy used his black-and-gold jacket as a blanket and curled up to sleep. A girl covered her ears when the orchestra started blasting a Wagner opera. A pair of boys imitated de Cou, waving their hands like conductors. Another girl slouched farther and farther into her seat as the concert went on, until she was nearly horizontal. A couple of times, the students applauded before a piece was finished.
For all that, though, most of the students paid rapt attention.
"I thought it was extraordinary," said Janice White, a teacher at Thomas Stone Elementary School. "Our kids don't have the opportunity to do things like this."
Her students were stampeding for the waiting buses, but she called a pair of them back to ask what they thought.
The musical tastes of Oscar Ruiz, 10, ran more toward the rap of 50 Cent, but he thought the concert was "pretty great," especially the section where they showed excerpts from EverQuest II while playing a song from the game.
Alexis Garcia, 10, loved the concert unconditionally.
"It was great when they played the drums and the trumpets," he said. Asked how the music made him feel inside, he paused for a moment before answering: "Happy."
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