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Greg Sandow on the future of classical music

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Let’s help this happen

January 24, 2015 by Greg Sandow

[contextly_auto_sidebar id="U9ZKZeEOtHhedFzv5Is4iOgEuSU4DzmA"] The Go-Go Symphony — which plays some of the most exciting music in Washington, DC, a perfect fusion of classical music and funk — is in line for a great honor, and a great opportunity. I’ve blogged about their first triumphant performance with a full symphonic ensemble, and their founder, Liza Figueroa Kravinsky, has done guest posts about how she developed the group. (She talks here, for instance, about the group’s big breakthrough into the heart of the go-go world, go-go being … [Read more...]

Excited audience

January 20, 2015 by Greg Sandow

[contextly_auto_sidebar id="cybmj5APWYlvIbPh5rKDH7ECM2aVCjJt"] Here’s a followup to my last blog post, about music, excitement, and another frontier for classical performance . The post was about an exciting performance the National Symphony did in a Washington, DC club, for an audience of around 2000 people who don’t normally go to classical concerts. Younger clubgoers, to judge from how they looked. On the program were classical pieces, and also some marvelous things — which easily held their own with the classical works — aimed at … [Read more...]

A triumph and a question

January 13, 2015 by Greg Sandow

[contextly_auto_sidebar id="moT41mYs3aEczDi5WeFRMcssnYagxfl7"] The triumph The National Symphony Orchestra played in a very large club, attracting so many people — more than 2000 — that they had to turn people away. And they didn’t just play classical music. The program did began with the Candide overture, and included the onrushing second movement of the Shostakovich Tenth, plus “Montagues and Capulets” from Prokofiev’s Romeo and Juliet, and, to end the evening, the “Mambo” from West Side Story. All of which the crowd — young, white, hip … [Read more...]

What I do

January 8, 2015 by Greg Sandow

Happy new year! I thought I might start 2015 with a few words about myself. Of course this is my online home, and many of you know me. But maybe it’s good to be a little bit comprehensive, partly to sell some of the things I do, but also to have a more me-like presence here. So… The basics I live in Washington, DC, with my wonderful wife Anne Midgette, chief classical music critic for the Washington Post, and our three-year old son Rafa. A smart, enterprising, funny, affectionate kid, and growing into a good family citizen. For 18 … [Read more...]

Holiday wishes

December 22, 2014 by Greg Sandow

Happy holidays to all! The photo shows my son — three years old in October — in front of our Christmas tree. Speaks for itself. Though it can’t tell you how thrilled he was when he learned to hang ornaments: “I did it!” Or how, while we were decorating the tree, he’d walk away and sit facing it in a chair on the opposite side of the room. ”I looking at it!” Or how I suggested we turn out the lights to look at the tree in the dark. And how he turned them off himself, saw the glowing lights of the tree, and just about danced. Or how he … [Read more...]

Music in the midst of life

December 18, 2014 by Greg Sandow

[contextly_auto_sidebar id="Cz19u65owQa4WzVOPbGyaq19QJBAdRSf"] Here’s a book by Adam Tendler, 88x50: A Memoir of Sexual Discovery, Modern Music and The United States of America. And here’s a well-meant quote, from Kirkus Reviews, which picked this as Indie Book of the Month: "An honest, searching exploration of the artist as a young man." Which is a safe, conventional description of what’s going on. It’s accurate enough: The book definitely is what the quote says, or rather fits into the category of books like that, since the words … [Read more...]

Conundrum

December 10, 2014 by Greg Sandow

[contextly_auto_sidebar id="4fbcUuBsn5SfYJcogrRJDChgcFg93ItA"] Here’s a question I asked myself, at one of the recent Irving Fine memorial concerts at the Library of Congress in DC. Fine, I’ll say in passing, is one of those entirely respectable but not memorable composers whom — in a festival or retrospective — we all more or less pretend was more important than he was. But I don’t want to go into that here. Instead I want to ask the larger question that occured to me. Fine began as a neoclassicist, and then, in the 1950s, started writing … [Read more...]

Another hot book

December 4, 2014 by Greg Sandow

[contextly_auto_sidebar id="0CQQxamfgn9Hce92qXid56YFjNnmRCbN"] WARNING: THIS BOOK CONTAINS STRONG LANGUAGE ABOUT CLASSICAL MUSIC. *** Srini Kumar, genius sloganeer and counterculturalist, used to sell a bumper sticker that read “Destroy what bores you on sight.” I suggest orchestras heed this advice. Why belabor it? Players are uncomfortable. Audiences are visually bored. Nobody knows what's going on. Can we all agree to move on? Okay. Enough. The first quote comes from the Amazon page for a book by Will Roseliep, The Libertine's Guide to … [Read more...]

Useful, fun, important book

December 1, 2014 by Greg Sandow

[contextly_auto_sidebar id="2z8Iqc4FTXmNqb0dSTIQfB6JLeuIeJ94"] Clubbing for Classical Musicians: A Do-It-Yourself Guide to Working in Alternative Venues, by Sarah Robinson, the codirector of Classical Revolution: L.A. Since she co-runs an organization that fosters playing in clubs and is a veteran club player herself, her book is beyond authoritative. And in fact you couldn’t find a more helpful guide, to something that more and more classical musicians are doing these days. It’s so helpful, in fact — and so thorough — that I’d reccommend … [Read more...]

The soul of a city

November 24, 2014 by Greg Sandow

[contextly_auto_sidebar id="YIPXOje5P1XkP7QlcaW0xveAhVMPRs8d"] Picking up now from one detail in my last post, about some Atlanta Symphony realities… When people say the Symphony is the soul of Atlanta, what do they mean? They can't be saying that any large part of the town dances to the Symphony's beat. Or that entire neighborhoods define themselves by what the Symphony plays. Or that whenever there's a performance, thousands of people — tens of thousands! — ask themselves if tonight they ought to go. Because those things clearly aren't … [Read more...]

A little rain…

November 21, 2014 by Greg Sandow

…falls into every life. Today, with regret, I’m going to rain a little on the Atlanta Symphony. Of course I’m celebrating their return to life, especially for the musicians’ sake. They’re once more doing what they love, getting paid, and (no small thing) getting healthcare. But along with that, here are three things to think about: The contract Crucial to the settlement was an increase in the number of fulltime musicians (receiving full pay and benefits). Once the Atlanta Symphony had 95 fulltime members. That number fell, once the bad … [Read more...]

Joining the world in Spain

November 7, 2014 by Greg Sandow

[contextly_auto_sidebar id="70PVqZFYlov39Dc4ArV5U7JAsBI1aSFb"] Here’s a link to the talk I gave in Spain a couple of weeks ago, at an arts marketing conference that was both focused and fun. I mentioned the talk in my last post, about why I think the arts — as an industry that claims to represent art — are basically over. I didn’t put it that way in Madrid, instead talking about “old-model” vs. “new-model” arts, the old model being, well, the Kennedy Center in Washington, built on a grand scale, and deliberately placed off to the side … [Read more...]

Time to join the rest of the world

October 28, 2014 by Greg Sandow

[contextly_auto_sidebar id="gFJYwh5h24sjO4iVIQjloJQ7MX4cPemC"] That — "Time to join the rest of the world" — is what I called a keynote talk I gave last week, at an arts marketing conference in Spain. And what I had in mind was radical — I think — at least to some people. Maybe not to my Spanish audience (plus some people from the UK, and from Latin America). While I spoke, a few people tweeted — and OK, I’m really tickled — that if I had a fan club, they’d join it. What I said What was my message? That art — the artistic impulse, … [Read more...]

It can be done (2)

October 8, 2014 by Greg Sandow

[contextly_auto_sidebar id="MSUNXhB7U7DH8Yr3nDGELAyL5CxYy2NJ"] Continuing, about groups that successfully attracted a new, young audience… In my first post on this, I told two success stories. About the Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment, in London, which rebranded itself in the style of current culture, and now reliably attracts young audiences of up to 1000 people. And about Wordless Music, in its early years in New York, which combined classical music with indie rock, or in one case with a big indie rock name, Jonny Greenwood, the … [Read more...]

With just three days to go…

October 1, 2014 by Greg Sandow

[contextly_auto_sidebar id="mlSS19YuFk3QKrfaMWrCwsg4CEXPYwEf"] This is an important Kickstarter project, which needs to be funding. Luckily, they're close to their goal. But every little bit helps! It's a British project, and I haven't looked into  whether it can accept funding in dollars, but even if not, it's something important to know about it. What is it? I'm going to give you the complete email I received from Gabriel Prokofiev, the British composer, producer of electronic dance music, and creator of both the Nonclassical record … [Read more...]

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Greg Sandow

Though I've been known for many years as a critic, most of my work these days involves the future of classical music -- defining classical music's problems, and finding solutions for them. Read More…

About The Blog

This started as a blog about the future of classical music, my specialty for many years. And largely the blog is still about that. But of course it gets involved with other things I do — composing music, and teaching at Juilliard (two courses, here … [Read More...]

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How to write a press release

As a footnote to my posts on classical music publicists, and how they could do better, here's a post I did in 2005 -- wow, 11 years ago! --  about how to make press releases better. My examples may seem fanciful, but on the other hand, they're almost … [Read More...]

The future of classical music

Here's a quick outline of what I think the future of classical music will be. Watch the blog for frequent updates! I Classical music is in trouble, and there are well-known reasons why. We have an aging audience, falling ticket sales, and — in part … [Read More...]

Timeline of the crisis

Here — to end my posts on the dates of the classical music crisis  — is a detailed crisis timeline. The information in it comes from many sources, including published reports, blog comments by people who saw the crisis develop in their professional … [Read More...]

Before the crisis

Yes, the classical music crisis, which some don't believe in, and others think has been going on forever. This is the third post in a series. In the first, I asked, innocently enough, how long the classical music crisis (which is so widely talked … [Read More...]

Four keys to the future

Here, as promised, are the key things we need to do, if we're going to give classical music a future. When I wrote this, I was thinking of people who present classical performances. But I think it applies to all of us — for instance, to people who … [Read More...]

Age of the audience

Conventional wisdom: the classical music audience has always been the age it is now. Here's evidence that it used to be much younger. … [Read More...]

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