Becky Reesor

Creates an experience that helps a night feel meaningful.

Stop the Clock

An immersive piano experience.

This is not just a show. It’s a moment where the room slows down and people settle into being there together.

Stop the Clock gives your audience an experience they feel, and gives you confidence that the night truly landed.

When you plan an event, you’re shaping
how the space will feel once people arrive.

Becky’s work is designed with that in mind.

Her performances support the atmosphere of an event rather than competing for attention. The goal isn’t to impress for a moment, but to create a setting where people feel comfortable, present, and open to what’s happening around them.

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As the performance begins, the pace of the room naturally slows. 

The music doesn’t interrupt conversation or demand focus. It supports the environment and gives the evening a sense of flow.

Live piano is paired with visual projection that adds depth to the space without overwhelming it. Sound and imagery work together to create an immersive experience people can move within, rather than something they feel required to watch.

Guests often mention afterward how relaxing the evening felt and how present they were able to be while it was happening.

“An escape from the noise of the outside world.”—David S

“Peace amidst the chaos.”—Danielle M

“From the first note, I knew it was something really special.”— Laura E

“Moving, mesmerizing.”—Laura Grey, University of Waterloo

Experience you can rely on

Becky Reesor holds a Master’s degree in piano performance from McGill University and has performed across Canada, the UK, and Mexico. Her work includes concert halls, festivals, arts centres, historic churches, and intimate performance settings where atmosphere matters as much as sound.

She has also held a musical direction role within a multidisciplinary arts community at Iona Abbey in Scotland. That experience shaped her understanding of how music functions as part of a shared experience over time, rather than as a single focal point.

Working in these varied environments has given her a strong sense of how rooms behave and how performance choices affect the way people feel during an event.


How booking works

1. Share your vision

Tell us your date, venue, and the kind of atmosphere you want to create. Becky listens carefully and helps shape the performance to fit your space and your audience.

2. Every detail is handled

Technical setup, timing, sound, and flow are planned in advance. The experience is fully self-contained, so nothing falls on your plate.

3. You host the night they remember

The room changes. The audience settles. The experience unfolds exactly as promised.

What people say afterward—

Becky’s work has been presented at festivals, theatres, galleries, universities,
corporate events, and private gatherings where the experience of the audience is a priority.

If you’re planning an event where the experience of your audience truly matters, this is worth a conversation.

Each performance is shaped for its specific setting, and availability is limited.
If this feels aligned with what you’re creating, the next step is simply to reach out and talk it through.