I walked into the auditorium with a friend from Austin, and he gasped, "This is bigger than Texas."
My friend was really
saying that he found it hard to believe there is an auditorium outside
of Texas bigger than any auditorium inside Texas. He found it was
especially hard to believe that a place like Minneapolis has such an
auditorium.
We were at a free orchestra
concert. Northrup Auditorium was built in 1929 as the central ceremonial
site of the University of Minnesota. Northrup is vast: It has 4,800 seats
--- 2,000 more seats than Carnegie Hall.
The next event I
attended in Northrup cost two bucks. It was a solo concert by an
82-year-old nurse. This nurse had once been a successful blues singer in
her younger days, touring all over Europe. Her name was Alberta Hunter.
Alberta sang for us. She did not show her age; instead, she showed humility on stage. She was nearly overwhelmed by seeing all the people who came out to listen to her after she had been out of the limelight for decades.
My next concert at
Northrup was Bonnie Raitt and it cost way more than two bucks.
I approached the
concert with a bit of trepidation: friends of mine had been ushers at a concert
by The Animals the previous week. My friends said the audience grew
restless and resentful because The Animals refused to sing their old classics.
They only sang their new music, which irritated the the audience who had come to hear the old
classics.
However, Bonnie
Raitt's audience was not restless, much less resentful. They were
absorbed.
Bonnie showed humility on stage. She told us, with a tone of awe in her voice, that Koerner, Ray, and Glover were in the audience. As far as I knew, these guys were just an ordinary folk trio playing a few venues in Minneapolis.
I had no idea they had been around for a long, long time. Bonnie told us that Koerner, Ray, and Glover had inspired her, had encouraged her, and had helped launch her career.
Then Bonnie pointed to
someone else in the audience: her father. She invited him up on the
Northrup Auditorium stage. She didn't give us his name, she simply asked
him to sing a song --- without a microphone. I was astonished that she would ask someone to sing without a mike in a vast auditorium. Was this a prank?
It soon became clear
that it was not a prank. Bonnie's father's voice was clear and sweet and strong. Then I remembered that
there had been a Broadway musical actor named John Raitt....was he Bonnie's
father?
My astonishment turned
to amazement: an old man’s un-miked voice filled an auditorium bigger than
Texas. It must have been John Raitt.
- . - . - . - .
YouTube video of
Bonnie Raitt and John Raitt singing Irving Berlin's "They Say It's Wonderful" (3-minute video)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pmyBA2xPN4g&feature=related
- . - .- . - . - .
NOTE: Doug's best stories have been collected into a book: Puppy Out Of Breath. Price = $11. You can purchase a copy at http://www.puppyoutofbreath.com
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