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Mystic Seaport Museum Invites Sea Music Fans to a Virtual Chantey Blast

Mystic, Conn. (January 21, 2021) — Mystic Seaport Museum announced it will hold its annual Chantey Blast as a virtual event, Saturday, February 6, from 1 to 3 p.m. The singalong event is a fundraiser to support the live performance of sea music at the Museum.

Sea chanteys (or shanties) are a form of singing developed to aid in the hard work of operating a sailing ship. The Museum has long been a leader in the preservation, education, and performance of the sea music tradition. Each year features live concerts and performances for visitors in our historic village, providing a unique setting to foster an understanding of the songs. For more than 40 years, the high point of the year’s program has been the Sea Music Festival, a four-day event that attracts musicians and audience members from around the world. The festival also hosts an academic symposium to present the latest scholarship on the subject. While the event is on hold for 2021 due to COVID-19, the Museum is committed to offering opportunities for mission-related live performances this summer and looks to the Chantey Blast to help fund the continuation of sea music on the grounds.

The 2021 Chantey Blast will be held via a live stream on Zoom and Facebook Live. A select lineup of chantey artists will lead songs and provide a background explanation to the music. The audience will be encouraged to join in from their remote location.

The event is free and open to the public. Registration is required and there is a suggested donation.

“This event is for both for those longtime fans of sea music and those who are wondering what the TikTok #ShantyTok trend is all about,” said Erik Ingmundson, director of Interpretation at the Museum. “This will be the first time we have been able to offer the Chantey Blast in a live, online stream and we encourage anyone with even a passing interest in the genre to tune in and join in the music.”

People may register for the Zoom session at:

https://mysticseaport.wpengine.com/events/virtual-chantey-blast/

Live streams will be found on the Museum’s Facebook account:

https://www.facebook.com/mysticseaport

The Museum has posted a number of sea chantey videos on its TikTok account @mysticseaportmuseum.

Media Contact

Dan McFadden
Director of Communications
Mystic Seaport Museum
860.572.5317 (o)
860.333.7155 (m)
dan.mcfadden@mysticseaport.org/

About Mystic Seaport Museum

Mystic Seaport Museum, founded in 1929, is the nation’s leading maritime museum. In addition to providing a multitude of immersive experiences, the Museum also houses a collection of more than two million artifacts that include more than 500 historic vessels and one of the largest collections of maritime photography. Mystic Seaport Museum is located one mile south of Exit 90 off I-95 in Mystic, CT. For more information, please visit www.mysticseaport.org/ and follow Mystic Seaport Museum on Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, Instagram and TikTok.

 

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Winter Fun and Activities at Mystic Seaport Museum

Mystic Seaport Museum will be open all winter with a robust offering of indoor exhibits, family and children educational activities, as well as virtual programming. If you haven’t visited Mystic Seaport Museum during winter, we hope you take the opportunity to do so this year and participate in our cold-weather activities!

The core of our winter experience are the indoor exhibits, exhibitions, and activities. All of our galleries are open to visitors with some new offerings that opened in the latter part of 2020.

  • Figureheads & Shipcarvings is a new exhibit in the Wendell Building.  This is a reimagination and new installation of part of our ship figureheads collection that presents the artifacts in a new light — literally and figuratively — with an emphasis on the purpose and artistry of figureheads set in the context of 19th-century wood carving.
  • Sailor Made: Folk Art of the Sea is an exhibition that opened last fall in the C.D. Mallory Building. Featuring more than 200 artifacts from our collections, the exhibition explores the art that emerged from the world of the working sailor, reflecting their connections to shipboard life, their thoughts about culture on shore, and the souvenirs they created to remember and share the experiences of their travels.
  • A Way with Wood: Celebrating Craft is open in the Thompson Building’s Collins Gallery. The show introduces visitors to the many ways people transform one of nature’s most malleable materials to objects of utility, art, and beauty. At its center, shipwrights are restoring Museum watercraft in a constant live demonstration.
  • Mary Mattingly’s Open Ocean is the work of one of Brooklyn’s leading contemporary artists, Mary Mattingly. For several months, Mattingly immersed herself in the Museum’s collections vault, poring over artworks, opening drawer after drawer of artifacts, in search of “evidence of how the sea has always challenged the rigidity of modern, terrestrial life; how its very nature permits a different tenor of creativity.” This exhibition shows what she found.
  • Voyaging in the Wake of the Whalers in the Stillman Building is a comprehensive exploration of America’s historic and contemporary relationship with whales and whaling.
  • View the remarkable beauty and craftsmanship of the cabin from the 244-foot square-rigged sailing ship Benjamin F. Packard.

The Treworgy Planetarium will be offering two shows daily: “Winter Stars and the Mariner” and “Polar Night, Artic Light.” In addition, a “full-dome” movie will be projected on the Planetarium’s domed ceiling on weekends. Planetarium programs are free with admission.

The Greenmanville Meeting House will show two movies: the Irving Johnson classic “Around Cape Horn” and “Unfurling the Wind.”

The Home Port children’s activity center reopens for 2021. Set in a warm and inviting room that harkens back to the Victorian Era, Home Port invites families and children to come and spend quality time together with a variety of activities and arts and crafts. Home Port is limited to two families at a time, so please ask for tickets at the entrance gate.

For a look at 19th-century domestic life and open-hearth cooking, stop by the Buckingham-Hall house.

But not everything is indoors this winter. We also have exciting outdoor activities as well. The children’s playscape is open for the kids to work off some energy and the 1841 whaleship Charles W. Morgan is open to board and learn about life at sea on a 19th-century whaler.

Please check our  calendar for our schedule of events. New this year are guided shipyard tours on select days and our Membership Department has a full schedule of exclusive member programs.

If you can’t make it to the Museum, don’t worry. We have an expanded offering of virtual programs this Winter to bring the Museum to you. Please visit our new Virtual Programs page to see the full schedule.

The Museum is open to the public 10 a.m.-4 p.m., Thursday-Sunday. Visitors are required to wear a mask and practice social distancing. For a complete list of our COVID-19 policies, please visit our COVID-19 page.

We look forward to seeing you this winter! And don’t forget to stop by Social, our new coffee shop, on your way in and enjoy a hot beverage to warm you up.

 

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