Are rigid classical concerts scaring away potential fans?
Vancouver Symphony's Bramwell Tovey debates Brooklyn Philharmonic's Richard Dare
CBC News
Posted: Jul 3, 2012 4:38 PM ET
Last Updated: Jul 3, 2012 4:35 PM ET
Vancouver Symphony music director Bramwell Tovey, seen leading the VSO and B.C. students in 2000, feels a reverential classical music audience has its place and that orchestras are working to find ways to engage curious new listeners. (Chuck Stoody/Canadian Press)
Related
Related Stories
People are buying and listening to more classical music, according to recent statistics. Conversely, orchestras worldwide are struggling. Are concert halls scaring away new fans?
Richard Dare, CEO of the Brooklyn Philharmonic thinks so: this spring, he sparked a fierce debate with a strongly worded online essay blasting concert halls and other classical music venues for what he calls a state of rigidity and a "cadaverous body of rules" that intimidate potential new audiences.
"My point was not to say that we ought to clap at a particular time or to overturn the apple cart in a particular way...but to say 'We have a problem here.' The problem is that the world's population is growing by leaps and bounds… [but], particularly in the United States, the concert attendance is shrinking dramatically," he told Jian Ghomeshi on CBC's Q cultural affairs show.
'I'm concerned that everyone has a chance to be able to enjoy and understand music...I think it's about inclusiveness'—Richard Dare, Brooklyn Philharmonic
"I'm concerned that everyone has a chance to be able to enjoy and understand music," Dare said. "I don't think it's about relaxed codes of behaviour. I think it's about inclusiveness."
His initial missive, published by The Huffington Post, drew hundreds of critical comments, Dare acknowledged, adding that what he found most upsetting was an undercurrent of elitism.
"People using language like 'The unwashed masses will never understand this art form' ... [and] 'If you don't follow our rules, get out,'" Dare said. "That sort of exclusionary language, I think, has no place in art in general and certainly not in classical music."
According to conductor and Vancouver Symphony Orchestra music director Bramwell Tovey, the experience of attending classical concerts has indeed become more formal since the Second World War. Still, he sees no problem in the current custom of an orchestral audience remaining reverential and largely silent.
'If I go and listen to a Brahms symphony, I'm really not interested in the emo expressions of the person who's sitting next to me'—Bramwell Tovey, VSO
"If I go and listen to a Brahms symphony, I'm really not interested in the emo expressions of the person who's sitting next to me. There's a lot of inner narrative addressed in classical music and I think when people listen to the music, they want a certain amount of quiet and composure around them in order to be able to listen to it," he said on Tuesday.
"If you're in a mosh pit at a heavy metal band's concert — my son plays in a heavy metal band and I've done this — people can shout as much as they want, but you can't hear the shouting because the music is so loud. It's a different kind of music-listening experience entirely."
The real issue, Tovey says, is for orchestras to find new ways to showcase classical music that engage audiences, for instance incorporating lighter programs presented in a more informal fashion, holding open-air events where concert-goers might enjoy a picnic and wine as they listen or perhaps allowing for more vociferous audience expression when presenting contemporary music.
"Every orchestra in the world wants to play to packed houses and I think orchestras internationally are doing everything they can to develop audiences," Tovey said.
Share Tools
Horror tale Haunting Melissa targets app audiences by Jessica Wong May. 16, 2013 4:40 PM If you're seeking the weather, the news or a pic of what your buddy had for lunch, there are apps for that. What about an original, Hollywood-calibre ghost story from a producer of The Ring and Mulholland Drive? Now, there's an app for that, too. Haunting Melissa ventures into the burgeoning realm of digital storytelling as a traditional ghost story with a modern twist -- namely a tale that unfolds through an iOS app.
Top News Headlines
- Senator Pamela Wallin leaves Conservative caucus
- Senator Pamela Wallin says she is recusing herself from the Conservative caucus while her travel expense claims are under scrutiny. Wallin's departure comes one day after Senator Mike Duffy left the Tory caucus amid controversy over his expense claims.
more »
- Toronto Mayor Rob Ford denies crack cocaine allegations
- Toronto Mayor Rob Ford says allegations he was caught on tape smoking crack are "ridiculous," following reports that someone had been trying to sell a purported recording of such an event to U.S. and Canadian media outlets. more »
- Sailor fighting cancer says AWOL charges dropped
- All charges against a Nova Scotia woman in the Royal Canadian Navy who is fighting cancer, and who was charged with being absent without leave and facing a court martial have been dropped, the woman and her lawyer say. more »
- Should genetic testing for cancer be available to all Canadians?
- The revelation that Hollywood celebrity Angelina Jolie had a double mastectomy as a preventative measure against cancer stoked heated discussion this past week, but one prominent cancer researcher says it demonstrates the need to make genetic testing available to all Canadians. more »
- 12 young leaders changing Canada in this week's Generation Why
- If the number of young entrepreneurs and innovators in Canada is any indication, the generation that came of age alongside the modern web is ready to rethink everything. Meet 12 young people our readers nominated as the most dedicated, impressive, creative and intelligent Canadians under the age of 30 they know. more »
Must Watch
Latest Arts & Entertainment News Headlines
- Thieves steal $1M worth of jewels during Cannes film festival
- Thieves ripped a safe from the wall of a hotel room near the Cannes Film Festival and made off with around $1 million worth of jewelry in a brazen late-night burglary. more »
- Tommy revival stirs emotions for Pete Townshend

- For Pete Townshend, watching the Stratford Festival's revamp of his hit rock opera Tommy stirs up difficult memories from his working-class, post-war upbringing. more »
- Vancouver's Stan Douglas wins $50K award for photography
- Vancouver's Stan Douglas has won the Scotiabank Photography Award, the $50,000 prize given annually to a Canadian contemporary photographer. more »
- FILM REVIEW: Star Trek Into Darkness
- J.J. Abrams beams back into Star Trek with the sequel Into Darkness, a new journey offering a mix of fun and familiar, anchored by the relationships of the classic characters. more »
Q Blog
Pete Townshend on The Who's "Tommy" May. 17, 2013 4:15 PM
CBC Books
Juvenile inmates benefiting from Russian literature May. 17, 2013 3:32 PM A juvenile correctional facility in Virginia has seen the behavioural benefits of encouraging their inmates to read the works of classic Russian writers like Tolstoy and Dostoevsky.
- Senator Pamela Wallin leaves Conservative caucus
- Toronto Mayor Rob Ford denies crack cocaine allegations
- Tim Bosma public memorial Wednesday in Hamilton, Ont.
- Public raising funds to buy alleged Rob Ford crack video
- Dennis Oland named as prime suspect in father's slaying
- Sailor fighting cancer says AWOL charges dropped
- 2 earthquakes felt in Ontario and Quebec
- Milwaukee bar wins overturn of bra ban
- Transgender teen finds strength in hockey


