Meet the person soundtracking sport day at Fenway Park : World Cafe : World Cafe Phrases and Music Podcast : NPR

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Fenway Park

Corwin Wickersham/WXPN


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Corwin Wickersham/WXPN


Fenway Park

Corwin Wickersham/WXPN

At 112 years previous, Fenway Park is the oldest Main League Baseball stadium within the U.S. Whereas the Boston Pink Sox are the primary attraction, there’s one other efficiency taking place on sport day.

For our Sense of Place: Boston sequence, we sat down with Josh Kantor, the organist at Fenway Park since 2003.

Nestled in a nook of the stadium’s luxurious clubhouse, Kantor performs his double-decker electrical organ. He has an ideal view of the motion on the sector — which he must seamlessly weave music into the movement of the sport.

Kantor performs the organ in Fenway’s Park’s Aura Pavilion, overlooking the sector.

Corwin Wickersham/WXPN


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Corwin Wickersham/WXPN


Kantor performs the organ in Fenway’s Park’s Aura Pavilion, overlooking the sector.

Corwin Wickersham/WXPN

“It goes a great distance for those who can anticipate when there’s going to be a pinch hitter, see a double play unfolding, or acknowledge an infield fly rule or you already know when a pitching change is about to occur. All of these little issues that come from watching quite a lot of baseball,” he says.

Kantor explains how he tackles the unpredictability of gameday, how he auditioned for the job, and the way he handles tune requests from the gang.

This episode of World Cafe was produced and edited by Miguel Perez. Our senior producer is Kimberly Junod and our engineer is Chris Williams. Our programming and reserving coordinator is Chelsea Johnson and our line producer is Will Loftus.

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