
Composer and creator Ken Lovern joins us for a conversation about the new music video for “Boone Plays It Back.” We’ll talk about the process of bringing the music to life in a visual form, and how performance, character, and storytelling come together through sound and imagery.
We’ll also explore the musical approach behind the piece, including Boone’s extraordinary ability to instantly hear, replicate, and transform complex piano works, and how that virtuosity is reflected in the arrangement and performance.
The track features vocals from Madisen Ward, an operatic performance from Alyson Cambridge, drums by Lester Estelle Jr., and trumpet by Stanton Kessler, along with Lovern’s own work on organ, piano, and additional instrumentation, creating a layered, cinematic sound that drives the piece forward.
1.
Tell us the story of this track. Why did you choose to visualize it specifically in this way?
This track, Boone Plays it Back, is the first single from “Blind Boone the Musical”.
Blind Boone the Musical is an historical musical fantasy about the life of Missouri’s ragtime pioneer, John William “Blind” Boone — a man who struggled against and overcame racism as one of the first African American concert performers.
The setting of this track is that The Blind Boone Concert Company has just rolled into town and Boone’s manager, John Lange Jr., is in front of the town’s new opera house.
He is hyping the performance, saying “Boone Plays it Back!”
Boone’s remarkable ability to play back what other pianists have just played is a great asset when Lange is trying to convince people to attend a concert.
One of their most successful performance techniques was to ask any audience member to play a piece and then Boone would play it back, usually with more fluidity and musicality, often adding variations or embellishments.
This tune captures the excitement, confidence, and swagger of a professional promoter who believes in what he is promoting.
2. What was the inspiration behind this new video (visuals, storyline, etc.)?
In order to tell the story of Blind Boone more completely, the release is accompanied by a comic book.
In this video, I use the comic book art extensively to visually tell the story along with the music.
I also used some vintage photos of Boone and some of Boone’s promotional materials.
There is also a vintage image of a tornado.
The Tornado reference “He’ll make a tornado come out from the keys” refers to one of Boone’s most popular compositions where he imitated a tornado on the piano.
The inspiration was a tornado that had devastated Marshfield, Missouri in 1880, killing an estimated 100 people.
Reportedly, when Boone first played this piece in Marshfield, the audience members became convinced that there was an actual tornado occurring and started to seek shelter until they were assured it was only the re-creation on the piano.
The only contemporary image is of amazingly accomplished opera singer Alyson Cambridge who sings the part of an up tight local arts enthusiast who is skeptical of allowing an African American performer to play the piano in the town’s new opera house. But she is won over when she learns that Boone can play the classics by Chopin, Liszt, and Schumann.
Alyson has performed for over two decades on the world’s leading opera and concert stages – The Metropolitan Opera, Carnegie Hall, The Kennedy Center, London’s Royal Albert Hall, among others.
3. What was the process of making the video?
This was a very “do it yourself” video production. I took images of the comic book and the vintage flyers and imported them into iMovie and used iMovie to create the video.The comic book adaptation of the story was made by The Gutter Studios, Constanza Osuna, Julia Diaz, and Katie Blancha.So, while I hired the comic book artists, I did the video myself.





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