February 26, 2017

Go Down to the World of Music


Before I came to New York, I read a line saying that "New York is the meeting place of peoples. It is always hopeful." I gradually understand it when I go down to the subway. There is a whole world underground.


Tens of thousands of people go around the New York City subway every single day. You can get a cross-section of all the people who live in New York. You can see every type of person in New York, This underground world is complicated, messy but beautiful. You may consider it as dumpster but you would also find those subway performances really moving.

Every time I go down to the major subway stations, I could always see a singer, a dancer, or a drummer. They try to entertain passerby through their performance and if lucky, attracts a crowd. Some of them would like to perform inside the car for a few seconds between stations. Usually, there were few claps and not many bills go into their boxes.

Sometimes, however, I saw people stopped to watch the performance, to dance with the music and to sing with the performer. Interactions were created at that time. People tend to be more open to music in the subway than in theater. I would guess because the space between audience and performer is closer.




                                                                                                                           Images from the Internet

Gladly, the government is very supportive to the street performance. Since 1985, Arts & Design has managed the Music Under New York (MTA MUSIC) program, to bring joyous and engaging music to the commuting public. Currently, more than 350 soloists and groups participate in MTA MUSIC providing over 7,500 annual performances at 30 locations throughout the transit system.

New York's subway performers has become a city hallmark. Performers find the subway as their stages to express. Commuters find a way of connection. Everyone can give a loud shout "This is New York."

February 21, 2017

The Stations You Might Never Go - B/D/F/Q/N Trains



“The next and the last stop is: Coney Island–Stillwell Avenue.”

If you take one of the D, F, Q, N train which heads towards Brooklyn, you will hear the conductor’s voice greeting through speakers like above.



You may use NYC subway every day, but you might haven’t been travelled to any of these terminal stations. This week, we will walk you through the last stops of B, D, F, Q and N Train, and enjoy an early spring weekend in Brooklyn with sunshine and beach.


First, let's take a look at the NYC subway map. The last stops of B, D, F, Q are all down in Brooklyn.




Located at the corner of Stillwell and Surf Avenues in Coney Island, the Terminal Coney Island–Stillwell Avenue Station has eight tracks and four island platforms, with trains entering from both compass north and south. It is one of the biggest subway stations in NYC.





This station is featured with a collection art of My Coney Island Baby (2003) by Robert Wilson, an artist and theater director. Wilson’s arts are spanned on a glass brick wall, which stretches approximately 370 feet along one side of the station. His inspiration came from an exploration of Coney Island’s holiday trip and amusement park that sits just several blocks outside the subway station.








Right across of the street of the main station, a colorful candy shop you must hang in is “IT’SUGAR”. This store is full of innovative sweets, fun novelty gifts, and giant candy. A good idea is to grab a small bag of mixed candy and keep it later on. Why? Let’s wait and see.



Also, the amusement park, Luna Park, is just a few feet away along the beach. However, it will open on April 8. It’s a pity that we missed the opportunity to enter the park this time.

There is a beautiful beach where you can spend the whole afternoon. You can sing and dance, walk your dogs and enjoy the fascinating sunset on the wooden bridge here. Laying on the wooden deck chair on the bridge, you will see a versatile series of colors changing and suddenly be reminded that, nature is the greatest artist in the world. Now you can enjoy the candy you grabbed.







Brighton Beach Station, the terminal station of B train is just nearby. Travelling from Coney Island–Stillwell Avenue Station, you can just simply take the Q Train. This stop is located in a community, with many delicious but affordable small restaurants around.




On the routes of B and Q trains, even though Sheepshead Bay is not a terminus, we highly recommend you to explore the bay.

An interesting blogger describes it in these words:
“When I first started researching NYC history I assumed that Sheepshead Bay was named for its one-time resemblance, in outline, to a sheep’s head. After all, that’s how a peninsula on the North Shore in Nassau County, Cow Neck, was named. Only later did I discover that it was named for a fish that can no longer be found in the local waters, the sheepshead.”
If you want a lazy weekend to refresh yourself, here is the place.






Anyway, the end of a line is not the terminus. Instead, it is just the beginning of a trip.