Thank God They Didn’t Have Plastic Buckets In The Nineteenth Century
It’s break dancer-backing drummers vs. carriage drivers in a fight over who can be the most annoying midtown obstacle:
Posted: September 16th, 2007 | Filed under: Everyone Is To Blame HereIn an unquiet city like New York, Fifth Avenue and 59th Street is especially known for its uproar. Double-decker buses rumble past. Taxicabs honk. Tourists mill. Workers refurbish the Plaza Hotel.
All the while, up to 20 horses quietly stand by, waiting to take passengers on carriage rides in Central Park.
On Friday, one of them bolted after it was apparently startled by a loud noise. The horse, a 13-year-old mare named Smoothie, ran nearly a block, and when her carriage became caught on a tree, she collapsed and died.
Witnesses told reporters that somebody walking past and beating a small drum may have been the source of the noise.
James Williams, the drummer who had been playing near Smoothie’s carriage, said yesterday, “We did not do anything malicious, like walk up and hit a drum in a horse’s ear.”
Yesterday Mr. Williams, who plays for tips, found himself facing the kind of attention he did not want. Reporters asked him where he had been playing and how loudly. Horse owners complained about him and the break-dancing group, Two Steps Away, that he accompanied on Friday.
The Horse and Carriage Association of New York said it planned to hold a news conference this afternoon at 59th and Fifth to call on the city to ban street musicians and “overly loud” music in the area. The group said it also would ask the city to provide secure hitching posts for the horses, which are often tethered to trash cans and street lamps.