The Atlanta Lawyer October 2013 | Page 12

a courthouse line Behind the Curtain with the Bard Show Band By Sid Barrett Bass Guitar and Uninvited Criticism, Georgia Department of Public Health [email protected] E very eighteen months, a man in sunglasses and a black suit comes up to me in a restaurant, offers to buy my wife and daughters, and then tells me “we’re getting the band back together.” That’s when I know that it’s time for another Bard Show. The Bard Show’s music director is Kim Meyers, a classically trained pianist. Kim helps the writing staff develop the music, and arranges the songs. The music consists of modified popular songs with the lyrics rewritten for comic effect. Measures and verses are added and dropped throughout the rehearsal process, partly to fit the tempo of the plot, and partly keep the Band occupied so they don’t cause trouble at rehearsal. I am told that Kim plays the piano quite well. I wouldn’t know, since her piano sits twenty feet away on the edge of the stage, and I sit behind the curtain and between the drums and the guitarist’s Marshall amplifier, where the volume is roughly equivalent to a mortar attack. The Band can see Kim, though, and we often wave at each other. Hi Kim! the heart to tell Kim, since she works so hard on the sheet music. Most of the Band members spend at least half the show behind the curtain This means we have no idea what the actors are doing at any given point in the show. When we hear the audience laugh or applaud, we don’t know if it is because a joke went off well, or because one of the stage crew got caught on stage when the lights went up. Being behind the curtain also carries with it the risk that certain actors – we won’t use names, but let’s say “Greg Presmanes” just for the sake of conversation – will step on your cord and rip the input socket clean out of your $2595 Eric Clapton Tribute Fender Stratocaster. But there are advantages. For instance, we only see the actors from the back. For many of them, that is their best side. In conclusion, I’d like to say thank you on behalf of myself and the Bard Show Band, and I hope we passed the audition. I’d say “see you at the show,” but I probably won’t see you, since Kim will probably make me sit behind the curtain again. Especially after she reads this. The composition of the Bard Show Band changes from show to show, but is usually comprised of acoust ic piano, electric keyboards, bass, drums and guitar. This year we will add sax. We may not be very good, but as lawyers trained in the school of rock & roll, we have embarrassingly expensive equipment and we play real loud. Every year and a half, the Band members eagerly open the draft script, hoping to find “Layla,” or maybe “Stairway to Heaven.” Every year and a half we open the script to find show tunes, with maybe a Katy Perry or Cee Lo song thrown in to appease the younger Bar crowd. If you’re a rocker raised on the Allman Brothers Band and ELP, nothing gets your sap rising like a good show tune, except maybe the breakfast buffet at the Colonnade. One guitarist actually cried when he was told not to use his new wah-wah pedal on a ballad from Le Miserables. None of the Band members reads music, so we learn the songs by ear. No one has 12 THE ATLANTA LAWYER October 2013 The Official News Publication of the Atlanta Bar Association