
 
        
         
		East Villager’s Rain  
 Worthington’s stormy  
 journey to Carnegie Hall 
 BY BOB KRASNER 
 It’s sometime in the early 1980’s, around  
 3:30 in the morning. Rain Worthington  
 and her band ZONE are hauling their  
 equipment off the stage at 8BC, the now legendary  
 East Village basement performance  
 space. The chickens that had wandered in  
 from the lot next door during the load-in  
 are long gone, but they still had to avoid  
 stepping on the beer-drinking rabbit that  
 was a permanent resident.  
 “If you had stopped me then and told me  
 that someday my music would be played  
 in Carnegie Hall, I would have said, yeah,  
 right.” 
 It’s been a long and improbable journey  
 for  Worthington,  whose  Contemporary  
 Classical composition “Still Motion” will be  
 performed on February 16th by a chamber  
 orchestra on the main stage at Carnegie  
 Hall. 
 “It would have been inconceivable to me  
 back then,” she explains, “because at that  
 time I had never written a piece of music  
 on paper.” 
 In fact, Worthington has made a name  
 for herself in a very demanding field without  
 the benefit of institutional training – she is  
 the rare example of a self-taught Classical  
 composer. 
 Raised first in a steel hut in Houston that  
 had flaps instead of windows, then on a VA  
 Hospital base, she started fooling around on  
 her grandparents’ piano when she was three  
 years old. There were no lessons, though,  
 and she didn’t touch the instrument again  
 until  she was  an adult,  when  she  found  
 ZONE in Tompkins Square Park, 1985. L-R: Rain Worthington, Mitch McNeill,  
 Susan Compo, Mustafa Ahmed, Charles Compo, Mark Worthy. 
 herself spending a lot of time alone in a  
 friend’s family’s house with a grand piano.  
 “It was kind of like I was a kid again,”  
 recalls Worthington.  
 On returning to her home in Boston, she  
 invested $200 in an upright piano that subsequently  
 moved with her twelve times. She  
 began to “make up things” on the piano, but  
 not being able to read or write music and  
 without the benefit of a tape recorder, she  
 memorized all of her compositions. 
 Once she moved to New York in 1976,  
 Continued on p. 21 
  
  
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 20     February 13, 2020 Schneps Media