Some things about Christine Brewer

I went to Christine Brewer's Zankel (Carnegie) Hall recital tonight and now, over a glass of strawberry milk, I will tell you what it made me think about. Spoiler Alert: it's marketing and PR.

1. One of, if not the, best things about working at IMG Artists was getting to meet the clients in a non-formal setting when they came into the office. I'm not sure if he remembers, but I remember Eric Owens coming in and suggesting we rearrange the furniture in the lobby. I was all-too-happy to offer my two...dollars...on the lobby design, as was my friend Mark from the Vocal Division. I also remember washing my hands next to Renée Fleming in the Ladies Room and uncharacteristically trying not to look her in the eye because I was wearing something stupid that day and she was the real-deal glamorous. And I think Hilary baked cookies for everyone at one point? Regardless, it was fun to interact with the artists in the office, because then you'd go to a concert later that night and remember Joshua Bell talking about how he had spent all morning at the Apple Store. I never met Christine Brewer, though she is represented by IMG, so what was amazing about her performance tonight was that I felt like I had met her, many times. I'm not going to say she was "warm and natural on stage" because that is an understatement; I actually felt like she was practicing her recital in my apartment and we'd known each other for a decade. When a mutual friend introduced us backstage, he said to her, "You've met Amanda, right?" I actually almost said "yes"! Can you imagine? I had in no way met this woman and I was almost like, "Oh yeah, we've met. Many times." I write a lot on this blog about how marketing and publicity materials need to make the artists seem accessible, but there's really no substitute for an artist actually being that accessible in live performance.

2. I like a lot of concerts, but I rarely want to hear them again right after I've experienced them. This one, though, I would have bought and could have been re-listening to as I type now. "Bought," you ask? Recently, bands have been selling the MP3s from their live shows right after they happen. I realize this gets more complicated when the music is not written or owned by the artist, but that is something I would be more willing to purchase than a CD, even if the CD was of the exact same repertoire.

3. It is ironic that skinny women get fancy recording deals because, erm, that's when the music is supposed to be heard and not seen? Yes yes, I know all about "the whole package," but that doesn't make it any less ironic.

4. Christine (first name-basis, because as you know, we've met many times before) sang an encore about a review of an opera singer's Carnegie Hall recital at her Carnegie Hall recital! M-E-T-A Meta Meta woooo! Carnegie is going to post the name of the piece and composer tomorrow. The piece was Celius Dougherty's "Review". There was a genius line about the singer's recital partner. It wasn't "able" or "reliable"...but something like that. I'm sure it will be mentioned in the review. Zing!
October 15, 2009 12:47 AM | | Comments (5)

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I often leave a concert, especially the Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra, wishing I could purchase or sign up to have sent to me, a CD or MP3s of what I just experienced. I'm glad to hear some artists are doing this and understand the difficulties with royalties, etc., but I think it would be a great revenue source for the organizations and artists. And I would love having all those recordings to listen to again and again.

Celius Daugherty had a long career and was well loved. His favorite singer was Povla Frijsh. There is an article about her on http://voxmentor.com/?page_id=959, with musical examples and information about Daugherty and their collaboration.

re: concert recordings.

Maybe I'm a recordings junkie and don't go to many concerts, but I think I might be willing to buy recordings immediately after, if they were available.

I certainly downloaded the bootlegs from the last two Bay Area Radiohead concerts and probably would have purchased them on the spot had I had the option.

EMI is actually doing this! Last night and tonight his Berlioz Requiem with Mariinsky & CBSO is available instantly in CD form in the lobby after the performance. I'd heard of this with pop acts, e.g. Pearl Jam, but never with classical. THE FUTURE.

I believe the word you're looking for (regarding the accompanist) is "sympathetic." What really killed me about that song was that when I saw the credit on the Carnegie Hall web site after the recital, I'd assumed they misspelled Daugherty, as in Michael... the song felt so completely au courant that I was flabbergasted to discover its actual vintage.

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Life's a Pitch Why don't we apply the successful marketing and publicity campaigns we see in our everyday lives to the performing arts? Great ideas are right there, ripe for the emulating. And who's responsible for the wide-reaching problems in ticket sales and audience development? Boring artists? Greedy managers? Overstretched marketing departments? We're beyond debating who owns the problem. Let's fix this thing.
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Amanda Ameer left her position as Publicity Manager at IMG Artists in June 2007 to start First Chair Promotion. She currently represents Hilary Hahn, Gabriel Kahane, The King's Singers, David LangEric Owens, Michael Gordon, Hélène Grimaud, Sondra Radvanovsky and Julia Wolfe, and serves as a consultant to Chamber Music America.
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