Admiring music is a lot like admiring nature: it鈥檚 appreciating something ephemeral, as quick to change听as light on a landscape. That鈥檚 the spirit of the music Anastasia Allison plays as the violinist of the , a duo she formed with pianist Rose Freeman in 2017. The women hike with their听instruments (Freeman brings a keyboard) into remote wilderness settings, don formal gowns, and play unannounced, most often to no audience.
The point is to create a moment of pure art, small in scale in respect to the mountain settings, says Allison. 鈥淲e want to make something beautiful听补苍诲 then disappear.鈥 The Musical Mountaineers have performed some 40 concerts in the wilds of the Pacific Northwest, and Allison estimates that fewer than 30 people have caught the concerts in person.
But they鈥檙e slowly gaining a following, thanks to an active 听channel where the duo posts videos of most performances. And Allison, a 38-year-old resident of Everett, Washington, is emerging as a quirky icon in the Pacific Northwest outdoor scene. The former park ranger and railroad law-enforcement officer now works as an adventure coach, a听, and the purveyor of a singular piece of women鈥檚 backpacking gear听(more on that later).听

The sparse attendance at Musical Mountaineers performances听is by design, says Allison. 鈥淚f we wanted it to be a show, we could announce it ahead of time, or show up at 11 A.M. at ,鈥 she says, referring to the popular Seattle-area hike. Instead, Allison and Freeman keep their recitals听a secret, setting out from a trailhead in the dark, aiming to begin playing at dawn. Staging concerts miles into the woods,听on places like Washington鈥檚 Mount Dikerman or听Hidden Lake Peak,听补苍诲 Wheeler Beach on California鈥檚 Lost Coast, the Musical Mountaineers play traditional standards like 鈥,鈥 鈥淗allelujah,鈥 and 鈥淪unrise, Sunset.鈥
For those who do happen to catch their gigs, it can be an overwhelming experience. 鈥淚鈥檒l look up and see this person with tears streaming down their face,鈥 says Allison, thinking of one man in particular who found the duo at Sahale Arm in Washington鈥檚 North Cascades while hiking with his daughter. 鈥淧eople say it鈥檚 particularly emotional because they aren鈥檛 prepared for it. I love that鈥擨 live for moments that feel like an unpromised gift.鈥
The gift is a theme for Allison, in music and in life. When she worked as a park ranger at Washington鈥檚 Twanoh State Park, she saw firsthand how offering live music can build bridges. Allison would sometimes serenade visitors with her violin on her rounds of the campground. If afterward听she听needed to enforce the campground鈥檚 quiet time, groups tended to be a lot more cooperative than on days when she hadn鈥檛 brought her instrument to work.听
More recently, it has also informed her life choices鈥攁 close call on Washington鈥檚 Highway 2 in January 2017 inspired her to make some big life changes. Returning from a winter hike with her mother and husband, Allison鈥檚听truck went into a 360-degree spin on the ice and ended up in the opposing lane with a semi barreling down upon them. The semi听managed to avoid her truck, but the incident听shook Allison enough that she soon quit the unfulfilling law-enforcement-officer job with Burlington Northern. 鈥淩ealizing that every day is an unpromised gift, I had to make a change,鈥 she says.听

Another change was the small business she began about that time鈥攕elling pee cloths. In lieu of the cloth bandanas some women use to maintain hygiene on backpacking trips, Allison鈥檚 is antimicrobial, quick drying, and fashioned听with snaps to attach it to a pack for quick access. She wanted the $20 pot-holder-size听cloth, she says, 鈥渢o be a legitimate piece of gear. So often women鈥檚 gear is an afterthought. Gear designed for women by women helps legitimize our place in the outdoors. I deliberately picked a nonjokey name for the cloth for that same reason.鈥 It鈥檚 also a Leave No Trace solution, reducing litter in the backcountry鈥攖hose tissue blossoms found behind every tree and bush along popular trails. The Kula Cloth business is growing; she fulfilled her thousandth order in December.
Leave No Trace is听the same sentiment behind keeping Musical Mountaineers shows hard to find. 鈥淲e don鈥檛 want a crowd trampling high-alpine meadows just to watch us play,鈥 says Allison. On the other hand, she loves the idea of people heading into the mountains on the off chance of finding them and inadvertently receiving the benefits of being outside. 鈥淚f they only catch a sunrise听they never would have seen, then I feel they have found us,鈥 she says. 鈥淭hat is exactly the spirit of the Musical Mountaineers.鈥