Annex proved successful venue for concert series

MILLERTON — The NorthEast-Millerton Library Annex has been put to good use in its first year. Last Saturday, Wooden Nickel provided the “encore performance� to the inaugural “Music in the Annex� series, which started this past July.

The idea for the concert series started at last year’s Family Fun Festival, which doubled as a celebration of the library’s acquisition of the building. Some local musicians had been scheduled to play outside, but with the crummy weather, the band set up in the main room of the Annex. It turned out to be a great space for music, acting Library Director Roger Cohn said, and that gig was the seed that grew into the concert series.

A matching grant from the Northeast Dutchess Fund, part of the Berkshire Taconic Community Foundation, provided the library with $800 that helped pay for amplification equipment to get everything up and running.

“We were surprised we were awarded the grant,� Cohn said, “but very pleased.�

As for finding bands to play, Cohn simply sent out a mass e-mail.

“As a musician myself, I’m part of this great community of musicians in the area who are very generous,� he said. “Most people would drop everything they were doing to come and play somewhere. I think the only people who turned me down, if you want to call it that, were people who were so busy with paying gigs that their schedules were already booked up.�

The eight concerts, which were free to attend, were held from July 17 through last weekend, Oct. 30.

Attendance was mixed, from a high of around 45 for the first Wooden Nickel concert in July to a low of around 18. But even though Cohn said he would have liked to see more people attend some of the events, a discussion with one of the musicians put the attendance in a new light.

“When we had 18 people there, at the end of the show I went up and said, ‘Gee, I wish more people came out,’ and the performer said, ‘Well those 18 people were really enthusiastic and really responsive,’ and that’s something that performers really feed on. It was a great example of ‘small is beautiful.’�

Some donations collected from the shows will be either divided among the musicians, who played for free this year, or put in a fund for future events. The Annex is closed off for the winter due to the high heating costs of the building, but is still put to use by the local fundraiser, Adopt-a-Family, during many of the winter months as a storage facility and meeting place. However, Cohn was absolutely excited about next season.

“I’d like to go and maybe purchase some lights for the stage and a few other things,� he said. “And I’d love to eventually have an arrangement where we’d be able to pay some musicians for playing. Nothing big, a nominal but decent fee. This year everybody came and did this as a favor to me. And I don’t know how the bands feel, but I feel like I can’t ask these people to come year after year just as a favor.�

Cohn said that the Annex provides a unique cultural resource for the village and area, and also was a rare opportunity for musicians to play a venue that was different from the local bar scenes.

“There are a lot of possibilities, and I’m eager to explore all that,� he said. “I would like to express my appreciation to the library board for not only having the vision to purchase the building but to let me go and try this crazy experiment. And also to the people who attended and the musicians. I can’t say enough for how thankful I am. They really made it the success that it was.�

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