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  • 13
    Jan
    2012
    4:06pm, EST

    The back story: Why the marimba interrupted Mahler's Ninth

    By Kari Huus, NBC News

    Despite all the reporting on that iPhone ring tone shut that down a New York Philharmonic performance of Mahler’s Ninth Symphony, nagging questions remained.

    Why did it take the phone's owner so long to silence the offending marimba? It seemed especially unlikely behavior coming from a concertgoer sitting in an expensive front-row seat. Was he a boor? Was he hard of hearing?

    Man's marimba IPhone ring stops Mahler symphony dead

    A New York Times reporter got to the bottom of it by securing an interview with the man identified only as "Patron X." You can read it here.

    It turned out that the cellphone owner did not realize it was his phone making the sound to begin with because he had turned off the iPhone ringer, the Times reported. Patron X says he swapped his Blackberry for the iPhone just a day earlier and didn't realize that  the alarm was set and would sound even if the ringer was silenced for incoming calls.

    Patron X was mortified by the idea that he disrupted the performance, according to the Times. He said that he had been irritated many times in the past by disruptions during performances--coughing, inappropriate applause, and ringing cell phones.  

    "Then God, there was I. Holy smokes," he told the paper. "It's horrible. Horrible."

    If there is a silver lining, it is that Patron X's experience offers a valuable lesson that may benefit other iPhone-wielding concertgoers and conductors: Just turning off the ringer does not ensure that the device will remain silent.

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    Click here to follow Kari Huus on Facebook

    16 comments

    "Just turning off the ringer does not ensure that the device will remain silent." Perhaps not, but turning the dang thing off does.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: featured, new-york-philharmonic, iphone, marimba, alan-gilbert
  • 12
    Jan
    2012
    3:31pm, EST

    Man's marimba iPhone ring stops Mahler symphony dead

    During Mahler's Ninth Symphony a ringing cell phone caused the conductor to stop the concert on Wednesday in New York City. NBC's Brian Williams reports.

    By Kari Huus, NBC News

    Concertgoers at the New York Philharmonic Tuesday night did not have to be musicologists to work out that the marimba was not part of the famous work.

    Conductor Alan Gilbert halted the performance of Mahler’s Ninth Symphony when the offending iPhone ringtone sounded -- and persisted.

    Just minutes from the end of the hour and a half-long piece, Gilbert turned to the phone's owner, seated close to the front of Lincoln Center’s Avery Fisher Hall in New York City, according to an eyewitness account published by "Superconductor" blogger Paul Pelkonen.

    “The symphony ends incredibly quietly so there was literally no way that we could go on, Gilbert told NBC News. "So I stopped the music and I asked the general vicinity where the sound was coming from ‘please turn off your cellphone.’ And I had to ask several times..."


    In the ensuing pause, some in the audience reportedly called for blood, shouting: "Kick him out!" and "$1,000 fine!" the witness recounted.

    Gilbert quietly employed shame until the offender -- described as an elderly man by another blogger -- confirmed that the phone was off.

    Before continuing with the concert, Gilbert apologized and explained that normally it’s best to ignore such disturbances, but he said this was "so egregious that I could not allow it."

    This was the first time Gilbert has stopped the orchestra for a violation of the "cell-phones off" rule, a media contact at the symphony said, but at least the second time that it has happened in the symphony’s history.

    For classical music buffs who witnessed it, there was some satisfaction to be gained from the incident, which occurred in what is otherwise a quiet and mesmerizing part of the Mahler work.

    "In a way, it’s great that that schlimazel’s iPhone happened to go off at such a sweet spot in Mahler’s Ninth on Tuesday. All of us… got to exercise some righteous indignation, schadenfreude, and the adrenaline rush of watching a fight," wrote a classical music blogger on "thousandfold echo."

    The downside, said the writer, was that after "Mahlergate" there was just no turning back the clock.

    "After this kerfuffle, it’s impossible to talk about the actual music, just as it was impossible for listeners to return to the symphony’s transcendent stillness after the cellphone," with news coverage focused on the man with the marimba, and "nary a pixel spent on what came before or after."

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    574 comments

    Selfish is as selfish does. There is a gentleman (not really a gentleman) who, apparently, has decided that he can conduct his business at ten at night on his cell phone while he walks his dog around the neighborhood.

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    Explore related topics: cellphone, featured, mahler, marimba, kari-huus, alan-gilbert, ny-philharmonic

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Kari Huus

Reporter Kari Huus joined msnbc.com at launch in 1996 after 7 years reporting from China. In recent years, she has focused on domestic issues, playing a key role in msnbc.com series including The Elkhart Project, Gut Check America, and Rising from Ruin--on the recovery of two Mississippi towns after Hurricane Katrina. Huus has also covered a wide array of international stories, including China's 2008 earthquake, the Asian economic crisis, the fal …

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