The idea of offering a free piano recital by Richard Goode at Town Hall seems like a good idea in theory, poised to attract a grateful audience of the young and underprivileged. But, once here, you realize it only atttracts the same ill-mannered, overly-demanding geriatrics that show up at every other classical music freebie in NYC. Jeez, people, could you at least stop snoring?


Stop being ageist, and in truth when I heard Mr. Goode playing a Mozart piano concerto in San Francisco recently, I was one of those who felt inclined to snore.
Stop being ageist, and in truth when I heard Mr. Goode playing a Mozart piano concerto in San Francisco recently, I was one of those who felt inclined to snore.
Stop being ageist, and in truth when I heard Mr. Goode playing a Mozart piano concerto in San Francisco recently, I was one of those who felt inclined to snore.
Stop being ageist, and in truth when I heard Mr. Goode playing a Mozart piano concerto in San Francisco recently, I was one of those who felt inclined to snore.
Stop being ageist, and in truth when I heard Mr. Goode playing a Mozart piano concerto in San Francisco recently, I was one of those who felt inclined to snore.
Stop being ageist, and in truth when I heard Mr. Goode playing a Mozart piano concerto in San Francisco recently, I was one of those who felt inclined to snore.