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Backbone
> Ear Whacks
Puckering Up: LIP SCHTICK FOR A LOST ART
By Sharon Nichols . Photo by Tom DiMauro

Show tunes have always given me a rash. Until now, that is. Steve “the
Whistler” Herbst has forever changed my tune. The mere sight of
his debut CD, Broadway and Beyond, rocks my galaxy to the very core. He’s
there on the front cover in black tux and snazzy red bow tie like a purse-lipped
Joe Pesci; on the back cover, he’s blithely reclined on the trunk
of his car, the license plate “WHISTLR” an obvious draw to
the eye. But my true transformation from blasé to bliss took place
in the first ten seconds of this recording with “We Kiss in a Shadow”
from the “King and I.” Was this a musical saw I was listening
to? Dazzling.
I
frolicked through the living room as the International Grand Champion
Whistler seduced me with “I Feel Pretty” from his “West
Side Story” medley. Stunning. Doing the dishes that evening to “The
Impossible Dream” from “Man of La Mancha,” “I
Could Have Danced All Night” from “My Fair Lady,” and
“Memory” from “Cats” was joy upon joy. I called
several friends to play them snippets from the 15 Broadway hits over the
phone. The verdict was unanimous: This CD is pure, unadulterated rapture.
I had finally mastered my inner cartwheel, discovered the true meaning
of life, and found the solution to the reversal of entropy—whistled
show tunes!
Like many listeners Steve “The Whistler” Herbst has encountered,
I wasn’t aware that I should be taking the art more seriously. I
mean, he was whistling “Maria,” for godsake. Herbst, however,
is deadly serious about what he does, and after chatting with him, I understood
why.
He took this youngster back on the timeline to an era when instrumental
whistling was a true art form, back to a blessed, golden age when names
like Elmo Tanner, Gene Kelly, Harpo Marx, Fred Lowery, Bing Crosby, and
prima donna Alice Shaw brought whistling to the forefront. Movies such
as The High and the Mighty and The Bridge on the River Kwai also kept
whistling a favorite pastime, as did the ever popular “Andy Griffith
Show.” To our parents and grandparents, using lips and lungs as
an instrument was a familiar and highly respected art. Today it’s
considered an oddity or, worse yet, a joke. If birds, whales, and dolphins
can do it seriously through the ages, why not us?
“My biggest challenge is getting people to accept that whistling
is something they want to listen to,” said Herbst. He told me of
an encounter with a neighbor in Garrison who, when seeing his grand prize
trophy from the International Whistlers Convention, asked to hear the
winning whistle, as if Herbst would immediately produce the loudest, shrillest,
or longest single note blast, like a dog whistle or taxi call. “Unfortunately,
that was her notion of whistling. There’s a lack of awareness and
appreciation for whistling as a musical art form, as most people have
never been exposed to good whistling and have no idea what it’s
like. But in the ‘30s, ‘40s, and ‘50s there were commercially
successful whistlers who were well known, traveled with the big bands,
and were household names. They were very much appreciated.”
Herbst explained that in recent decades, portable electronic devices such
as walkmans, boom boxes, and even cell phones with games have caused internal
(or self) entertainment to fall by the wayside. As a child, Herbst saw
it happening when transistor radios began accompanying neighbors on their
daily walks. “People stopped entertaining themselves. So, there
aren’t too many individuals out there who’ve heard good whistling,
or have had an example set for them. Whistling is a lost art, a loner’s
art.” His motto: “Whistling is an idea whose time has returned.”
Born in Ossining, New York, into a musical family, Herbst has been whistling
for half a century and is self-taught, with a three-octave range (as a
singing baritone, he can deliver only two octaves and five notes). Whistling
was a private joy for him growing up as he developed his own range, timbre,
and tune; publicly, he began singing at age seven to audiences of 1,000
or more and was a member of his junior high and president of his senior
high school chorus. His professional whistling career began unexpectedly
while performing as a singing soloist with the University of Pennsylvania
Glee Club.
“The director used to whistle to simulate flutes,” recalls
Herbst. “One night he came up dry, which is a scary thing for a
whistler. After the concert I told him I could do it for him. And he said,
‘Fine, it’s all yours.’ For the rest of my undergraduate
career, I was whistling with the Glee Club.” Before he knew it,
he was simulating flutes and recorders for members of the Japanese royal
family, and whistling classical, jazz, blues, pop, and Broadway tunes
on the BBC, UPN, Fox, CNN, “The Today Show,” “Eyewitness
News,” and CBS’s “Early Show.” Other more regal
performances have taken place at The Kennedy Center, Avery Fisher Hall,
and Carnegie Hall. It was his rendition of “Danny Boy,” along
with Franz Lizst’s “Hungarian Rhapsody No. 2,” that
snagged him the international award in Louisburg, North Carolina, in 2001,
beating out 23 other whistlers who traveled from as far as India. He’s
enjoyed performing for children and has considered teaching this lost
art to help preserve it. He’d like to whistle in commercials and
on soundtracks, but his ultimate goal is to guest star with symphony and
pop orchestras, standing in for a singer, violinist, or flautist.
“Some say I am to whistling what James Galway is to the flute,”
Herbst asserts. “My whistling gets compared to all sorts of instruments—flutes,
recorders, trumpets, violins, musical saws, oboes, and even a Theremin.”
With such an ethereal sound, one might imagine that there are also some
holistic advantages behind the lost art of whistling. “It has some
definite mind and body benefits,” he explains. “People chant
to get into a zone, and whistling can do a similar thing. It can transcend
normal sounds and hit a certain chord in the body. People tend to find
whistling very soothing and relaxing. I hear from people all the time
that listening to my whistling—especially my CD—has calmed
down babies, children, and pets. I even know a psychotherapist who plays
my CD between sessions to clean the angst out of the room, to chill out
after listening to somebody’s woes for an hour.”
More than just a relaxation tool for the listener, the art improves lung
power and capacity for the whistler. “In my practice, I whistle
going uphill while breathing in and out. It’s similar to how a baseball
batter puts extra weights on the bat in practice, then swings at the plate
without them. The bat is not as heavy, so he can swing it faster or more
easily. Whistling going uphill increases lung capacity by putting a certain
amount of stress on them to make them work better. When I’m in a
performance without the stress, I have more impressive lung power.”
Herbst not only practices his instrument while walking uphill; he whistles
in the car, in the shower, and walking to and from his day job in recruitment
advertising and employee communications in Manhattan. Pedestrians are
drawn to his music, sometimes following the pied piper for blocks.
Having recently performed at his Ossining High School 40th reunion, Herbst
is now contemplating the genre of his second recording. Should it be classical,
love songs, kid’s songs, or Christmas songs? I recommended the latter,
musing selfishly once again on the cheer I could discover in yet another
genre that gives me hives. “I don’t know what I’m going
to do,” he said. “But I’m contemplating what would have
the widest appeal.” He enjoys being a recording artist and a competitive
whistler, but ultimately he says there’s nothing like performing
for a live audience. “Seeing the reaction on people’s faces,
watch it go from skepticism to awe…they just can’t believe
what they’re seeing and hearing.”
Aside from getting listeners to take him seriously, there are a few other
challenges Herbst must hurdle. One is mastering “Flight of the Bumble
Bee.” Other hurdles are colds, coughs, or chapped lips. “If
my lips are out of shape, I’m out of business,” he says. His
wife, Melinda, might agree: she says this kisser has great lips.
Intrigued yet? If so, visit stevethewhistler.com for the sheer entertainment
of hearing a live performance or two, or to watch “The Whistler”
in action in a streaming video from Kennedy Center. To order Broadway
and Beyond, send a check or money order for $17 per CD plus $3 shipping/handling
(add $1 shipping for each additional CD) payable to: Steve "The Whistler"
Herbst, P.O. Box 7044, F.D.R. Station, New York, NY 10022.
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