This post makes me just a little sad to write. Chorus America, a while ago, published the results of a study, which they say shows that people who sing in choruses are exceptionally good citizens. They then say that choruses should bring this information to the media, "to help establish an awareness of the personal and communal benefits of choral singing." Here's their press release about the study, and here's the study itself. (The quote comes from the end of the study.) So why am I sad to talk about this? Because the study suffers from an … [Read more...]
Magical thinking
I've talked before here on the lack of solid information -- statistical data -- on the current state of classical music. This hits in two ways. First, about some things (ticket sales to orchestra and chamber music concerts) there either isn't any data at all, or else the data hasn't been made public. And second, the data that does exist (for instance the NEA's periodic surveys of the classical music audience, or my own work on the age of the audience in the past) doesn't seem to circulate enough.As an example, look at an eager essay by Karin … [Read more...]
Why ticket sales matter
Sorry for my silence here. I'm trying to find a livable rhythm for my life -- but then that's a long story. I've had a few projects that claimed priority time, and I haven't wanted to be obsessive about this blog. But I shouldn't neglect it, either.*When I posted some time ago about the new NEA stats, about attendance at classical music events, and their potentially dire implications for the future of mainstream classical music institutions, some people objected in comments and elsewhere that ticket sales didn't really matter that much. Live … [Read more...]
NOI liftoff
Last Thursday night -- June 25 -- was the first National Orchestral Institute concert in which the students tried out the ideas we've talked about here, here, and here. (And, more indirectly, here, too.)The concert was, if you ask me -- and if you ask the students -- a great success. I'll describe it in a moment. But here's something to think about. Debate raged over the ideas the students put forth, a very raw collection, right off the top of their heads, the first day they'd thought about these things. Some people making comments here liked … [Read more...]
Updated dire
Hell is other people, Sartre famously wrote. But not in my life, and certainly not on this blog. When I posted my estimates yesterday of how much -- in real numbers -- the classical music audience has increased or declined between 1982 and 2008, I needed to know the 2008 adult (18 and over) population of the US. I couldn't find that figure, so I used 2004 numbers instead, figuring they'd be close enough. Using those numbers, I calculated a five percent drop in the size of the classical audience. See yesterday's post for details. But then I … [Read more...]
Dire II
Followup to my "Dire Data" post. The National Endowment finds a decreasing percentage of Americans going to classical music concerts. And it's a sizable decline. In the 1982 study, thirteen percent of American adults had attended a classical music performance during the past year. In 2008, the number had fallen to 9.3%, a 28% drop. But does this mean that the classical music audience now is smaller, in absolute numbers? Maybe not, because of course the population grew. So a diminished percentage might not mean a smaller audience. The … [Read more...]
Dire data
I'm amazed, from time to time, to see debates still raging in the classical music world about declines in ticket sales and the aging of the audience. You'd think we'd have settled these questions by now. How many cars does the US auto industry sell? We know that. So why don't we know how many people are buying tickets to classical concerts? I'll grant that the classical data is harder to assemble, since we have to gather information from many sources.But still, it's strikingly -- well, pick a word: immature? unworldly? unprofessional? -- … [Read more...]
Culture wars
Comments on this blog got fierce, over the past week. Comments, that is, to my posts about the NOI students at the University of Maryland. Here and here. I'm partly to blame, I'm sure, because I got heated myself. And I even got accused of brooking no oppositi/or thinon to anything I said.But I'm easy with the heat, from myself and others, because I think there's something big at stake. I passed on suggestions, from the students, for changes in the concert format, not for all concerts everywhere, but for a couple of concerts the students … [Read more...]
Back in the day
Once upon a time, a generation ago or so, classical music was far closer to everyday life than it is now. We all know this, I'm sure. But it's good to be reminded. So here are four quick appearances of classical music in the popular culture of the past. The Birds (the classic Hitchcock film, released in 1963): Tippi Hedren, the star, playing a woman in her 20s, visits a normal middle-class family, husband, wife, 11 year-old daughter. The family has a piano. Hedren sits down and plays Debussy's First Arabesque, which isn't identified, any more … [Read more...]
Good moves
1. The San Francisco Opera streams its live performance of Tosca to a sports stadium. 2. The Seattle Opera held a competition to find a host for what it calls a "reality-style video project," titled "Confessions of a First-Time Operagoer." They chose a 19 year-old student, who'll create an online chronicle of her first exposure to Wagner's Ring. These are good things. They make the opera companies more visible in their communities. They create buzz. They bring in people who wouldn't normally pay attention. The San Francisco Opera -- which has … [Read more...]
Defending the students
Here's the complete list of ideas -- for new ways of giving concerts -- from the students at the National Orchestral Institute. Treat it as a footnote to the more focused list in my last post. There are lots of repeats, no surprise, especially since the students wrote down their ideas after a discussion in which there had been many ideas, and lots of agreement. The point of all this? Go here for more explanation, beyond what's in my last post. As I've said, these students are more than ready for change. And the NOI, in my experience, goes … [Read more...]
Students’ ideas
I blogged last week about the National Orchestral Institute, at the University of Maryland -- how I'd talked to students there, and how excited they were to start changing classical music. So now I have the ideas they wrote down at the end of one of my sessions. I'm going to post these in two parts. First, today, a list of the top 30 ideas, as chosen by James Ross, who runs the NOI (which is a month-long training program for student orchestral musicians; here's a link to it). Tomorrow I'll post the complete list, everything the students … [Read more...]
A fan I love
Here's how I discovered a wonderful classical music fan. On my iPhone, I have an app called Reportage, which lets you pick up Twitter feeds in your area. Who's tweeting within a mile of you, within five miles, within ten miles? Tonight, in a down moment, I played with it. Who's tweeting within a mile of my apartment in New York? A lot of people, I figured. But not so. There were only about a dozen recent tweeters. Idly, I looked at what a couple of them had been tweeting. It''s fun, sometimes, just to dip into the Twitter stream at random. And … [Read more...]
Excitement for the future
As I've been saying on Facebook and Twitter, I spoke Saturday and Monday to students at the NOI, the National Orchestral Institute at the University of Maryland. I did that last year as well -- this is a one-month program every June for music students who play orchestral instruments -- but this year I was invited with something very specific in mind. Jim Ross,who conducts the student orchestra at the university and runs the NOI, wanted me to help the students come up with ideas for new ways of giving concerts -- ideas that he's ready to … [Read more...]
Quotation of the day
From a profile in this week's Washington Post Magazine, by Manuel Roig-Franzia:He pads in his socks across finely woven Persian carpets -- "This one would be worth $100,000 if it were in better shape," he remarks offhandedly. He passes the buttery soft Le Corbusier leather sofas arranged by his interior designer and the burbling fountain positioned just so by his feng shui consultant in a living room where soothing classical music is almost always on the stereo"Soothing classical music." People really do think classical music is … [Read more...]