On a bitter winter day three years ago, Tom Krueger walked into a long-vacant church on Wurts Street in Kingston for an informal tour and felt an immediate pull. The building had been empty for years, its future uncertain, its interior frozen in time. โ€œI’m walking through the place and every bone in my body was saying yes,โ€ Krueger recalls. While touring the space, he spotted water gushing through floorboards in the basementโ€”a frozen pipe had burst. Not knowing how to contact the owners, he knew he needed to act. He paid a plumber out of pocket to stop the flooding. โ€œIt had to be done,โ€ he says. โ€œNo one else was going to do it.โ€

That instinctโ€”to step in, to take responsibility before everything is fully figured outโ€”has shaped the slow, steady emergence of Tempo Performing Arts Center, which officially opens February 13 with an inaugural concert by the Swedish folk duo Vasen and the Canadian string ensemble The Fretless. Housed in a former church in Kingstonโ€™s Rondout neighborhood just steps from the Wurts Street Suspension Bridge, Tempo is a new nonprofit venue devoted to music and dance, with ambitions that extend well beyond concerts.

Krueger himself has a physical presence that mirrors the space heโ€™s brought into being. Tall and thin, with long salt-and-pepper hair and a slightly rumpled air, he rarely stands still. When he led me through Tempo on a cold January afternoon, he moved ahead in quick burstsโ€”small hops, sudden turns, an almost dancerly way of navigating doorways and staircasesโ€”like someone thinking with his whole body. He talked while walking, gesturing, doubling back to point something out, his energy buoyant and lightly restless, as if the building were pulling him forward from room to room. It gave the impression of a delighted jester, pleased not just with what he was showing, but with the act of moving through it at all.

Tempo founder and executive director Tom Krueger on the front steps of the venue.

Kruegerโ€™s path to Tempo was indirect. A musician, dancer, filmmaker, and cinematographer, he had long been looking for a place to workโ€”something communal, flexible, and rooted in live, creative exchange. Around the same time, the church was moving through a series of stalled plans. Its owners had considered turning it into a residence. Sloop Clearwater briefly explored making it their headquarters, then demurred. When Krueger first toured the space with local musician and unofficial neighborhood ambassador Peter Wetzler, the timing aligned. Within a yearโ€”after months of conversations, planning, and nonprofit logisticsโ€”the building was donated to the newly formed Tempo organization, with guidance from the Ashokan Center, where Krueger had served on the board for eight years.

The main hall seats 300, with flexible seating allowing the room to shift between concerts, dances, and other events. A sprung floorโ€”installed directly over the existing oneโ€”supports both dancers and musicians. Downstairs, former church rooms have been converted into rehearsal spaces, classrooms, and gathering areas. The furnishings are informal, many sourced secondhand. โ€œPeople kept saying it felt like a lounge,โ€ Krueger says of the downstairs. โ€œThat helped clarify what we were aiming forโ€”a place that feels welcoming and lived-in.โ€

A Three-Part Misson

Tempoโ€™s mission has three main components. The first is performance, with an emphasis on live music and dance rooted in traditional forms and contemporary practice. Programming leans toward folk traditions from around the world, experimental work, and forms that foreground human interactionโ€”string instruments, voices, bodies in motion. To keep performances accessible, Tempo uses a tiered ticketing system, with lower-cost community tickets alongside standard and supporter options.

The second component is education and community use. Classes in dance and music are already underway downstairs, including swing, tap, and flatfooting, with more planned. Community groups can rent the space at reduced rates, with the understanding that affordability extends to participants as well. โ€œIf weโ€™re helping you,โ€ Krueger says, โ€œwe expect that to be passed on.โ€

An early performance at Tempo by the Bard Baroque Ensemble in November.

The third pillarโ€”artist residenciesโ€”is still taking shape. The adjacent parsonage, a 3,000-square-foot building that had been abandoned for decades, is now under renovation and will eventually house visiting artists as well as Krueger himself. The long-term vision is to offer musicians and dancers a place to work, rehearse, and develop new material, with opportunities to present it at Tempo. Advisory conversations are ongoing, drawing on local artists and organizers with experience running residency programs.

An Interactive Sculpture

Krueger is open about the challenges. For much of the past three years, he has worked without pay, while covering expenses and overseeing renovations. Operational grants and individual donors now help cover basic costs, and staff are beginning to come on board. Laura Crimmins, formerly of O+, has joined as events coordinator, and Sarah Bissonette-Adler is serving as managing director. Krueger himself holds the dual role of executive and artistic director.

That structure reflects both necessity and temperament. โ€œI think of it as an interactive sculpture,โ€ he says. โ€œSomething that responds to the people who come through it.โ€ He is careful about programming decisions, balancing openness with the need to define Tempoโ€™s identity. โ€œIf it fits, yes,โ€ he says. โ€œIf it doesnโ€™t, I have to say noโ€”even when thatโ€™s hard.โ€

Tempo has already started hosting intimate performances and classes in its downstairs lounge space.

The building itself plays an active role. The churchโ€™s historic organ, dating from the turn of the 20th century, has been restored and is now fully functional. Bard College organist Renee Anne Loupret has been instrumental in bringing it back into use, and recent performances have demonstrated its range and power. Across the street, Cornell Park offers additional performance possibilities. The city has expressed interest in supporting outdoor programming there in the park’s natural amphitheater, with Tempo serving as a nearby indoor option when needed.

A Flowering of New Performance Spaces

Tempoโ€™s opening arrives amid a broader expansion of small-to-midsize performance spaces in the Hudson Valley, including St. Ritaโ€™s Music Room and Savage Wonder in Beacon, the Stissing Center in Pine Plains (and it’s soon-to-open Grace Note speakeasy), The Ellis in Newburgh, the Indigo Room at the Mahaiwe Performing Arts Center, Assembly in Kingston, and the Lucky Dog Listening Room in Beacon. Together, they reflect a growing appetite for venues that prioritize intimacy, experimentation, and direct engagement between artists and audiences.

For Krueger, the project also marks a personal transition. As work in film and cinematography becomes more precarious, music and dance offer a different kind of continuity. โ€œI can play music every day,โ€ he says. โ€œI can dance with someone and be fully present.โ€ That emphasis on listeningโ€”on responsivenessโ€”runs through Tempoโ€™s design and programming.

Asked what Tempo will look like in five years, Krueger is cautious. โ€œWeโ€™re still figuring out what it wants to be,โ€ he says. โ€œThe community will tell us. The city will tell us. The artists will tell us.โ€ For now, the focus is on opening the doors, hosting people, and letting the space begin to do its work.

Brian is the editorial director for the Chronogram Media family of publications. He lives in Kingston with his partner Lee Anne and the rapscallion mutt Clancy.

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