Kantor grew up in Athens, Georgia, where he began taking piano lessons at age "four or five,"[1] and developed an early interest in baseball through following the Atlanta Braves. He moved to the Chicago area when he was thirteen, and soon discovered Nancy Faust, the renowned organist for the Chicago White Sox. Kantor has repeatedly cited Faust as a major influence in his musical development as an organist.[2]
Kantor continued to play music through high school and college. He attended Brandeis University, where he honed his improvisation skills playing piano with a campus sketch comedy group.[3] After college, he remained in the Boston area and began to focus seriously on playing the organ, performing with local bands and comedy groups while supporting himself by working in libraries at Boston University and Harvard Law School.[4]
Boston Red Sox
When the Red Sox were looking for a new organist in 2003, Kantor was able to get an audition through the help of a friend who was working for the team. After two auditions in which he was asked to play a variety of popular songs and asked to improvise based on specific situations within a baseball game, he was hired.[5] As of 2015, Kantor had not missed a single home game in twelve years.[6]
During Red Sox home games at Fenway Park, Kantor plays organ music before and after games, mixing traditional favorites with current popular songs. During the ballgame, organ and recorded music alternate. Kantor works closely with TJ Connelly, the DJ for the Red Sox. Kantor takes requests from fans via his Twitter account (@jtkantor) and often plays songs suggested during the game by fans at the ballpark.[7] Sometimes he learns those songs in advance so he can play them for the requestee, a process Steve Albini called "incredibly charming."[8] Kantor has said that he got his idea in part from Yo La Tengo's live request fundraising shows on WFMU.[9]
Bands and other performances
In addition to his work with the Red Sox, Kantor plays regularly with Jim's Big Ego, a Boston-based rock band; The Split Squad, a so-called "super group" featuring former members of Blondie and The Fleshtones; and The Baseball Project, which writes and plays songs about baseball.
Kantor's high-profile job with the Red Sox has led to other notable performances including a program of ballpark music at Boston's Symphony Hall after the Red Sox's 2004 World Series championship; appearances on ESPN's SportsCenter, where he has played background music on the opening day of the baseball season for several years; and at the Todos Santos Music Festival, a multi-day arts and music festival founded by REM guitarist Peter Buck, at which Kantor plays keyboards and accordion in support of a variety of bands.[10] He was the organist for the Dropkick Murphys "Streaming Outta Fenway" show on May 30, 2020.[11]
^The Perfect Women (September 9, 2020). Adult Swim: The Complete Steve Albini Interview. Turner Broadcasting System. Event occurs at 11:39. Retrieved October 18, 2020. I think it's incredibly charming