Keeping The Beat With 'Ball In The House'
Keeping The Beat With
âBall In The Houseâ
By Larissa Lytwyn
The a cappella band Ball in the House found its name in a Brady Bunch episode.
âRemembered how [maid] Alice used to tell the kids not to throw the ball in the house?â band member Jon J asked with a wry grin. âThatâs how we got our name!â
Fusing pop, blues, jazz, and hip-hop, Ball in the House brought down the house during their recent performances at Newtown Middle School and St Rose School, part of the districtâs ongoing cultural arts program.
With a sound reminiscent of the boy-band groups of the late 1990s, the five-member, all-male band, peppered their introductory lessons on vocal parts, harmony, and rhythm with infectious all-vocalized beats.
Drummer Jon J taught students how to personify three basic beats â kick-drum, snare, and cymbal â through the pronunciation and delivery of different sounds.
For example, he said, to create a snare sound, one can hiss âPfâ in razor-sharp staccato.
Pairing the various sound together create âdrum patterns.â
Band member Aaron explained how the group worked in three basic vocal parts, the lowest, bass, followed by the midlevel baritone and higher baritone.
The parts are divided into the bass, background, and ever familiar lead vocals.
Band member Dan discussed a cappellaâs Latin roots, literally translating into âin the chapel.â
âWhile worshippers wanted to use music in their services, using instruments was considered disrespectful to the church,â he explained. âSo slowly the practice of forming oneâs own kind of âinstrumentationâ without the actual use of instruments became what we now know as a cappella.â
A cappella, he continued, is a way to produce music encompassing scores of styles including jazz, blues, barbershop, doo-wop, disco, techno, and even hard rock.
Throughout the performance, students clapped, cheered, danced in their seats, and applauded the musicians without prompting.
âI loved listening to them,â said one Newtown Middle School seventh grader, Zoe Walter. âThey reminded me of the Backstreet Boys!â
Her friends, Casey Schulz, Rachel Marcucilli, and Cara Colacurcio agreed.
âIt was better than I expected it would be,â said Casey.
âThey are very talented,â Rachel added. âTheyâre great to listen to.â
Cara enjoyed the different songs they performed, ranging from do-wop classics from the 1950s to contemporary hits from Jennifer Lopez, Britney Spears, and even Boy Georgeâs Culture Club.
The Boston-based group, all graduates of Berklee School of Music, has been performing together for about four years.
They have toured with groups including âN Sync, 98 Degrees, Sugar Ray, Lenny Kravitz, Jessica Simpson, and Cher, as well as performed at a number of schools and colleges across the United States.
âThey did a really good combination of education and musical performance,â noted Newtown Middle School seventh grade teacher Judy Cantonese. At one point, Ms Cantonese leapt up to bust a few moves with sweet-faced, longhaired bassist Tim.
Kathy Keating, another Newtown Middle School seventh grade teacher, especially enjoyed the doo-wop songs. âIt reminded me of my high school days,â she said.
Superintendent of Schools Evan Pitkoff also enjoyed the show. Dr Pitkoff, who tours the districtâs schools regularly, said the performance at Newtown Middle School carried a great âcross-generationalâ appeal. âBoth the teachers and students really seem to have enjoyed it,â he said.
For more information on Ball in the House, visit www.ballinthehouse.com.