reviews & press
- After 50 years on the river, Bargemusic comes ashore in Brooklyn Bridge Park, by Kirstyn Brendlen, the Brooklyn Paper, April 22, 2025
“After half a century on the water, Bargemusic has come ashore.
On April 5, the org christened its terrestrial new home, the Brooklyn Bridge Park Boathouse, with some classical music […] fans old and new made their way to the boathouse and filled it to capacity.
‘I couldn’t believe it, you know, the first concert — a full house,’ Peskanov exclaimed. ‘That was very nice to see.’
The April 5 concerts were the start of a jam-packed season. At least two concerts a day are scheduled every Saturday and Sunday through the end of May, with more to come…
All of those concerts, Peskanov said, will be free.”
- An Appealing Concert…Aaron Larget-Caplan, by Steve Smith, Night after Night on Substack, April 18, 2025
“The last time I visited Bargemusic in that storied venue’s original floating location, Boston-based guitarist Aaron Larget-Caplan rocked the boat with an impressively rangy program encompassing Bach, Spanish music, a wide span of contemporary fare, and his own original compositions. The same holds true of this newest visit…”
- What to Do in New York City in April: Adam Tendler, by Gabrielle Ferrari, The New York Times, April 10, 2025
“…Those in need of a pause can journey to the Brooklyn Bridge Boathouse this weekend to hear the daring pianist Adam Tendler play two extended minimalist works: The first is John Adams’s ‘Phrygian Gates,’ an early crystallization of the composer’s style, with musical cells replicating, expanding and tightening. The second is Johnson’s own ‘An Hour for Piano,’ which starts with a crunch before settling into a pensive tenderness, the piano recalling faraway bells.
Each work gets its own performance with Adams’s piece presented first at 2 p.m. on Saturday and Sunday, and Johnson’s at 4. You can pick just one concert, or attend both and enjoy the time in between watching the East River flow. Admission is free.”
- Bargemusic is Back, in Style!, by Claude Scales, April 13, 2025, the Brooklyn Heights Blog
“If I were told I had twelve minutes to live and could hear anything I wanted, I would choose the sublime first movement of the “Archduke.” Messrs. Peskanov and Arron, and Ms. Park, did a rendition that, to my ear, was the equal of the first I had heard, by Vladimir Ashkenazy, Itzakh Perlman, and Lynn Harrell.”
- Bargemusic Begins New Season on Land with Beethoven’s “Archduke” Trio, and a Real Archduke, by Claude Scales, April 2, 2025
“Last Saturday Bargemusic began its spring season in its new quarters, the Brooklyn Bridge Park Boathouse, located just north of the Pier 5 uplands, most easily reached from the Park’s Joralemon Street entrance. It’s a splendid space, with capacity for a sizeable audience, wonderful acoustics, and a stunning view of the Park and harbor…”
- “Bargemusic’s new chapter in Brooklyn Bridge Park kicks off Saturday,” by Mary Frost, Brooklyn Daily Eagle
“Bargemusic, Brooklyn’s formerly-floating chamber music concert hall, will be kicking off the season’s concerts on dry land — for the first time — at the Brooklyn Bridge Park Boathouse on Saturday, according to Mark Peskanov, violinist and Bargemusic’s artistic director.
In January, the 50-year-old organization’s beloved but rusting barge was towed from its slip at Fulton Ferry Landing near the Brooklyn Bridge, to meet its end. Until a new boat can be found, Brooklyn Bridge Park has provided a venue in its Boathouse near Pier 5. The space is roughly the size of the barge, with the same gorgeous views of the East River and Manhattan skyline. There are also restrooms conveniently located right outside the performance area […]
‘The ultimate mission of Bargemusic is to serve the community,’ [Peskanov] said. ‘And so we decided in this new phase, moving onto land at the Boathouse in Brooklyn Bridge Park, that all of our concerts will be admission-free. We think it’s in the spirit of Bargemusic, and in the spirit of this parkland, and we hope this partnership goes on for the next 50 years.’ […]
‘Bargemusic has been a cultural gem on the Brooklyn waterfront for almost 50 years now,’ Brooklyn Bridge Park President Eric Landau told the Eagle. ‘While Bargemusic figures out their next steps, we are thrilled to provide a space so they can continue the wonderful tradition of providing admission-free chamber music on the waterfront,’ he said. […]”
- “It’s the End of an Era for Brooklyn’s Bargemusic: The Floating Music Hall Begins ‘Chapter Two’,” by Mary Frost, Brooklyn Daily Eagle
- “Swansong: Bargemusic, one of New York City’s most beloved venues, sails into the sunset,” by Steve Smith, Night after Night on Substack
“In a city full of unlikely marvels, Bargemusic is among the foremost treasures any music lover could hope to know. Housed on a converted coffee barge moored at Fulton Ferry Landing just below the Brooklyn Bridge, the floating concert hall welcomed chamber-music cognoscenti and curiosity seekers alike since Olga Bloom, a violinist and violist, launched the venue in 1977…As [Artistic Director Mark] Peskanov stated in his note to supporters, concerts under the Bargemusic banner will continue at a new site: specifically, the Brooklyn Bridge Park Boathouse, where programming is planned to resume on April 5. ‘To have this new, incredible place for the musicians and the whole community, it’s a great miracle and evolution,’ Peskanov wrote in a message. ‘We are very grateful to Eric Landau, the President of Brooklyn Bridge Park Corporation, and his great team at the Brooklyn Bridge Park…'”
- “Live from New York: Small Concert Promoters Salvage the Future,” Van, May 7, 2020
“If we can bring in any people, even at six feet apart, we want to put on concerts,” [Artistic Director Mark Peskanov] continued. “If we have to be exact [about capacity and stage space] we can do that, we’ve been planning that. We are ready at the drop of a hat!”
- “Brooklyn Bridge, Star of the City: Here’s a Tour,” New York Times, May 6, 2020
“Weiss: We love Brooklyn Bridge Park, which is so democratic and lively. But we loved the […] charm of the waterfront before the park was built. The River Café and Bargemusic, the concert venue, are left from the old days. Manfredi: We were married at the Barge. We still go to concerts there.”
- “20 Best Things To Do In Dumbo, Brooklyn,” Vacationidea.com, November 4, 2023
- “Eastern Music Festival Orchestra’s ‘Fanfares and Flourishes’ brings audience to its feet at Dana Auditorium,” News and Record (Greensboro, NC), July 7, 2019
- “Eastern Music Festival Presents Khachaturian and Shostakovich Rarities,” CVNC: An Online Arts Journal in North Carolina, July 6, 2019
- “Uncompromising Music Survives on the Brooklyn Waterfront,” New York Times, June 5, 2017
- “Review: Donald Berman Balances Fire and Rhapsody at Bargemusic,” New York Times, May 31, 2015
- “Deviating From the Modern, to Fresh Effect,” New York Times, January 12, 2015
- “Still Music to the Ears, but From Odd Sources,” New York Times, January 5, 2015
- “From Liszt’s Soliloquies to Labor Blues,” New York Times, April 20, 2014
- “A Middle East Mourned and Celebrated in Suites,” New York Times, September 22, 2013
- “Riding the Waves of a Memorial,” New York Times, September 12, 2013
- “An Epitaph for Summer, Etched in the Senses,” New York Times, September 9, 2013
- “Bargemusic’s Labor Day Celebration” on NY1, Sept. 6, 2013
- “Violin and Bass Trombone Finally Meet, and It’s Love,” New York Times, August 30, 2013
- “Bassoon Solos on the Water,” New York Times, August 23, 2013
- “New Music, Defined by Time and Tide,” New York Times, July 15, 2013
- “Where Better to Play a Theremin Than on a Boat?” New York Times, May 27, 2013
- “With Spirit and Variety, a Festival Unfolds Anew,” New York Times, August 30, 2012
- “Music to Rock the Boat Fails to Disturb a Barge,” New York Times, July 9, 2012
- “Bach to Brooklyn” Editorial/Appreciation of Bargemusic founder Olga Bloom, in the New York Times, December 1, 2011
- “Standard Fare Upended, to Reinvent and Explore,” New York Times review, September 4, 2011
- “At Concert Tributes, a Mournful Undercurrent,” New York Times review, September 12, 2010
- “A Music Hall Sways to Its Own Beat,” New York Times, May 20, 2010
