Tag: ping pong

  • Jazz Pong

    Jazz Pong

    Music, sport and lifestyle will be
    today’s topics and we’ll stop in a crowded Bucharest neighborhood in a place
    where, starting February 14, 2015, the owners decided to implement a new
    concept: namely to bring ping-pong and jazz music together in one space. It is
    actually a sports hall in a sports complex which had 14 ping-pong tables and
    that was not at all promising from a musical point of view. Here is Voicu
    Radescu, the director of Green Hours, a restaurant in Bucharest hosting theater
    performances, with details about this concept:




    I simply had a flashback, I remembered a
    club in New York called Fat Cat where I was 4 times. For about 35 years the
    club has been hosting jazz concerts in a space where people can also play
    ping-pong and billiards. And I said to myself that if the concept was working
    there, why shouldn’t it work here in Romania as well. The concept could become
    quite popular, which would help develop this atmosphere of sport and jazz
    combined.




    All said and done. Then followed the
    preparations to adapt the hall to the purposes of the new activity to be
    developed there:




    We talked to the owner of the hall and
    he liked the idea. In just one month he had already prepared the hall from a
    logistic point of view. He had already bought several couches, arranged a stage
    and set up a partition wall to divide the area into two: one area exclusively
    for ping-pong and the other for ping-pong and jazz.




    This year the International Jazz Day was
    marked on April 30 in Bucharest through the 12th concert given in
    this very hall dedicated 95% to jazz music. That evening the hall was crowded
    and the concert was given by a professional jazz band: the John Betsch TRIO
    made up of the exceptional American drummer John Betsch, pianist Mircea
    Tiberian, double-bassist Michael Acker and guest saxophonist Liviu Butoi who
    also plays other wind instruments. Let’s see how the Jazz Pong club was
    launched on the market. Here is Voicu Radescu back at the microphone:




    Once a week we have a scheduled jazz
    concert, people come for the show, sit on couches and chairs around the stage
    and focus on the performers. Also, once or twice a week some very young musicians
    come and play on a small stage while people are playing ping-pong at the 11
    tables in the hall. It’s an interesting experiment. Those who come to play
    ping-pong are not disturbed by the jazz music and neither are the jazz
    musicians who simply mind their singing. It’s not a concert, it’s not
    background music, it’s just a creative intertwining of two activities, sports
    and music. For the rest of the time the hall is solely used for ping-pong.
    What’s interesting is that those who come to play ping-pong see a small stage,
    unoccupied by artists though, but they become aware of its existence. A couple
    of weeks ago a concert was given by Catalin Milea and Imagination Orchestra.
    Catalin Milea is a young sax player who studied both in Germany and the
    Netherlands. He retuned to Romania full of enthusiasm and ideas, and together
    with another 13-14 very young musicians, students and even pupils, he organized
    a concert in the sports hall. And given the environment, he introduced in the
    show a performance by two professional table tennis players who gave the tone
    on the ping-pong table. The noise of the ping-pong ball was amplified by two
    Condenser microphones and the musicians played to the various rhythms of the
    ball set by the two table tennis professional players.




    This could be an invitation for ping-pong
    players to also enjoy jazz music while playing. Voicu Radescu is back at the
    microphone with more details:




    Everything takes place in the
    neighborhood, which I like very much. It is a neighborhood of 200 thousand
    people and I’m sure that there are several thousand people who, even though
    they don’t know about the sports and jazz hall yet, would be interested to see
    what it is all about. It’s a nice way of spending one’s spare time listening to
    jazz music and playing ping-pong. The number of spectators varies from one show
    to another. We had the most numerous audiences on April 30th, there
    were more than 170 people. Jazz music concerts generally gather audiences of
    about 60, 70 people.




    There’s hardly anything more tempting
    than trying a sports and jazz evening! The club’s small tables are shaped like
    miniature ping-pong tables, the walls are covered by posters of various artists
    playing ping-pong and the piece de résistance in the drinks menu is the
    ‘bartender’s madness’ cocktail.