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- <text id=93TT0144>
- <title>
- July 12, 1993: Is the Symphony Orchestra Dying?
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- July 12, 1993 Reno:The Real Thing
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- MUSIC, Page 52
- Is the Symphony Orchestra Dying?
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Rising deficits and hidebound repertoires threaten the nation's
- concert ensembles
- </p>
- <p>By MICHAEL WALSH--With reporting by Daniel S. Levy/New York, Scott Norvell/Atlanta and
- Martha Smilgis/Los Angeles
- </p>
- <p> Buffeted by spiraling costs and falling ticket sales, frustrated
- by shifting urban demographics and paralyzed by a lack of innovative
- artistic vision, the nation's 1,600 symphonies today face the
- greatest challenge ever to their existence.
- </p>
- <p> Long considered indispensable indicators of a community's sophistication,
- orchestras are in danger of becoming cultural dinosaurs. Some
- are already extinct: within the past decade, major ensembles
- have collapsed in cities as disparate as Oakland, California;
- New Orleans; Denver and Birmingham, Alabama. Endowments have
- been tapped and seasons shortened; crowd-pleasing pops concerts
- have been added and community-outreach programs established.
- And yet the slide continues. Gathering last month in New York
- City for their gloomiest convention in years, the members of
- the American Symphony Orchestra League heard a stark message:
- Change or die.
- </p>
- <p> The numbers are grim. Last year, in the most detailed study
- of the problem to date, the Wolf Organization of Cambridge,
- Massachusetts, analyzed data from a 20-year period and declared
- that the orchestral industry is facing a financial crisis of
- unprecedented proportions. Deficits of the 254 major orchestras
- the report traced have soared from $2.8 million in 1971 to $7
- million in 1991, while operating exrose from $87.5 million to
- $207 million in the same period.
- </p>
- <p> Although ticket prices have increased substantially, they have
- not kept pace with operating costs; the average gap between
- earned income and the cost of making music has risen from $5
- per listener in 1971 to $26.17. Further, government support,
- after rising in the '70s and early '80s, has trailed off, falling
- more than 4% in the past seven years. "Everybody is hurting,"
- says Joseph Kluger, president of the Philadelphia Orchestra,
- whose subscriber base has fallen the past two years.
- </p>
- <p> That the American orchestras should find themselves scrambling
- for survival is ironic, for they are without a doubt the best
- in the world. The U.S. can boast at least two dozen ensembles
- that are better than all but a handful of European orchestras.
- Foreign conductors routinely rave about the quality of the American
- orchestral musician and applaud the high level of professional
- music education in the U.S. "In Europe we always have had the
- impression that the teaching in America is stronger and more
- serious," says conductor Wolfgang Sawallisch, who takes the
- helm in Philadelphia next season.
- </p>
- <p> Further, American symphonic culture is not some recent import
- but a populist movement whose roots stretch back to the mid-19th
- century: the New York Philharmonic, the nation's oldest, was
- founded the same year, 1842, as the Vienna Philharmonic. Many
- of the major U.S. ensembles are more than 100 years old.
- </p>
- <p> The three principal causes of the orchestras' current woes are
- financial, artistic and social. All have been visible for years,
- and are gathering steam. But it was not until the recession
- struck in force that their cumulative weight was felt.
- </p>
- <p> The first and most obvious problem has to do with money. Unlike
- the newly fashionable lean and mean corporations, symphonic
- ensembles cannot readily strip down. It takes the same number
- of musicians--about 100--to play a Strauss tone poem today
- as it did a century ago, and a major Beethoven symphony still
- requires almost an hour to perform. Orchestras raise funds through
- ticket sales (about 35% of their income), government funding
- and private donations, but income is hard pressed to keep up
- with expenditures even when an orchestra is performing to near
- capacity houses.
- </p>
- <p> New Orleans, which folded in 1991, is a case in point. Even
- with a relatively small $3.8 million annual budget, the orchestra
- had been struggling for years. Cutting back the season, from
- 40 weeks in 1980 to 23 weeks in 1990, didn't help. The symphony's
- demise left it owing $75,000 in back insurance premiums, $29,000
- in pension contributions and nearly $100,000 in conductor Dmitri
- Shostakovich's salary.
- </p>
- <p> The San Diego Symphony was luckier. In 1985 its accumulated
- deficit was $2 million, and a bitter labor dispute closed the
- doors of Copley Symphony Hall for the entire 1986-87 season.
- A management change, coupled with more pops-oriented programming,
- produced several seasons of balanced budgets. But in the teeth
- of the recession, a million dollars had to be slashed from the
- orchestra's $7.7 million budget, accomplished by staff cuts
- and a 7% decrease in players' salaries. Says symphony president
- Warren Kessler: "The musicians made the concessions we needed
- to operate."
- </p>
- <p> Changing demographics have also hit orchestras hard. As bastions
- of Dead White Male supremacy, they are, to some critics, politically
- incorrect targets whose Eurocentric offerings are out of harmony
- with the larger, more black- and Hispanic-influenced American
- culture. As the urban cores have changed color, downtown-based
- orchestras have had an increasingly difficult time persuading
- affluent suburbanites to come into town after dark. And the
- collapse of music education in the country's public schools
- has meant that orchestras can no longer take for granted a
- con stantly replenished, edu cated audience.
- </p>
- <p> In response, orchestras are busy innovating. The New York Philharmonic,
- invigorated under the new leadership of managing director Deborah
- Borda and conductor Kurt Masur, recently instituted a series
- of informal Rush Hour Concerts, which begin at 6:45 p.m. and
- feature off-the-cuff commentary from the podium before each
- piece. The New York musicians also open up the stage to local
- schoolchildren, encouraging them to try out the instruments,
- as do players in Baltimore and elsewhere. "It is wonderful to
- interact with the kids and to see my colleagues do something
- from the heart," says Baltimore flutist Mark Sparks, the main
- force behind his orchestra's program. And if minority audiences
- will not come to the symphony, the symphony will go to them.
- The Los Angeles Philharmonic offers free concerts in inner-city
- neighborhoods and, in the wake of the 1992 riots, gave a special
- free performance at a black church in South Central L.A.
- </p>
- <p> The Dallas Symphony is widely admired as a model orchestra for
- its fiscal health and user-friendliness. When retirees George
- and Gwen Beardsley appeared at the Morton H. Meyerson Symphony
- Center to inquire about season tickets one Sunday morning six
- years ago, marketing director Douglas Kinzey himself was there
- to persuade them to sign on; returning to their car, they found
- the garage had closed, so Kinzey drove the elderly couple home.
- Since then the Beardsleys have been loyal subscribers. "We abandoned
- the whole concept of selling tickets and started building relationships
- with our customers instead," explains Kinzey.
- </p>
- <p> Perhaps the most serious problem, however, is artistic. Concert
- programs have changed relatively little in a century, and not
- at all in the past 30 or 40 years. New works are often presented
- as a bitter pill to be washed down with familiar symphonic staples.
- Conductors, meanwhile, too often treat the Central European
- classical repertoire as a kind of competition course, with each
- one eager to put his stamp on the Beethoven symphonies or the
- Stravinsky ballets and thus climb the career ladder. "When I
- was a student in New York, you could hear orchestras playing
- diverse repertoires," Leonard Slatkin, music director of the
- St. Louis Symphony, told the Symphony League convention. "There
- is now a common repertoire. The overuse of a repertoire results
- in a malaise and an ennui among your audience."
- </p>
- <p> Another irony is that in the '30s, when the repertoire became
- codified, prominent conductors like Sergei Koussevitzky in Boston
- and Leopold Stokowski in Philadelphia were far more adventurous
- than their contemporary counterparts. Koussevitzky, the Russian-born
- bassist turned maestro, commissioned and performed dozens of
- new works by American composers, and Stokowski routinely surprised
- his audience with major premieres of challenging works, such
- as Alban Berg's opera Wozzeck. As the recent history of opera
- in America has shown, there are large untapped audiences hungering
- for something new. But as long as symphonies insist on treating
- their customers to the same handful of well-known works--masterpieces
- though they may be--symphonic music will lack the excitement
- that attends a new music-theater piece by Philip Glass, John
- Corigliano or William Bolcom.
- </p>
- <p> Despite all the problems, there are hopeful signs. More than
- 26 million people attended concerts in 1991, and if season subscriptions
- are off in many places, single-ticket and short-series sales
- have gone up. Out of the ashes in Denver and New Orleans have
- risen new player-managed or partnership ensembles, the Colorado
- Symphony and the Louisiana Philharmonic. Younger audiences--the norm in Europe, the exception in America--are showing
- a new discrimination in what they want to hear.
- </p>
- <p> Some years ago, Ernest Fleischmann, the feisty chief of the
- Los Angeles Philharmonic, proposed a "Community of Musicians,"
- a kind of superorchestra that would provide all of a city's
- musical needs, from performances of Mahler to string quartets
- in the schools to playing at weddings and bar mitzvahs. For
- it is only when the orchestra is seen not as a careerist battleground
- for carpetbagging conductors but as a vital part of the community,
- bringing music to a wide and diverse public, that its survival
- will be assured.
- </p>
- <p> "The measure of the future will be, How can we respond to this
- changing society and time that we are in?" observes the New
- York Philharmonic's Borda. "Those who haven't got the vision
- and the courage to make some of the changes that are going to
- be needed will fall by the wayside. That may not be a bad thing."
- In short: some may die that others might live. After all, the
- American orchestra first arose in response to a city's needs.
- In the end, a solid, productive marriage between ensemble and
- community may be the soundest innovation of all.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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