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Greg Sandow on the future of classical music

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The meaning of the surge (Where we stand, part 4)

February 1, 2009 by Greg Sandow

No, not the surge in Iraq. This is a surge, or at least a heartening increase, in ticket sales, which I've been hearing about for the past couple of years. Of course -- since, as I've said, we just don't have reliable data for classical music ticket sales and finances (I should put that in bold type) -- I don't know how big this surge is, or how broad, by which I mean how widespread it is in the classical music world. We know the Metropolitan Opera has been selling more tickets, but that might be a special case, caused by Peter Gelb's … [Read more...]

Doesn’t anyone here know how to play this game?

January 30, 2009 by Greg Sandow

A legendary quote from Casey Stengel, when he managed first season of the then-hapless New York Mets.A publicist for the Boston Symphony asked me to mention the latest edition of their online "Concert Companion," which is mostly about Verdi's Simon Boccanegra, an opera they're performing in a concert version starting right now. So I'll oblige. What they've done is very lame. And it's lame in instructive ways. Mostly they offer videos -- a Verdi biography, something about the historical context of Verdi's work, an interview with James Levine, … [Read more...]

Information shortage (Where we stand, part 3)

January 26, 2009 by Greg Sandow

Continuing with my series of "let's see where we are" posts...the others were here (an overview), and here (about a new spirit in the world about classical music). Plus supplements to the first post, and to the second.This one is about statistics, but maybe more importantly -- in the long run -- about transparency. We don't have enough numbers (and certainly not enough publicly available numbers) about how classical music institutions are doing. Opera America, I'm happy to say (they're the association of North American opera companies), each … [Read more...]

What I left out

January 25, 2009 by Greg Sandow

Left out, that is, in my "new spirit" post, about the new openness I sense about classical music, in our wider culture. This was the second of my "where we stand" series, updating some ongoing thoughts on the future of, and really -- I blew it. Yes, what I said about a new freedom in using classical music in commercials -- that's all true. And it's important. But I should have mentioned two other signs of a new wind blowing. One of them is Alex Ross's book. Here we have a serious book on classical music, and first, it's not stuffy or pompous, … [Read more...]

Back again

January 25, 2009 by Greg Sandow

I've neglected the blog, I know. I did a lot of intense preparation for my Juilliard and Eastman classes, both on the future of classical music. And in the middle of that, I took a long drive from my country place down to Washington to be at the inauguration, and of course to be with Anne. There I am, after the festivities, not a notable photo in itself (and the crowd looks so small!), but it's my souvenir, along with an overpriced t-shirt I bought later on. And you can see how happy I am.That night, after miles of walking, I had to drive back … [Read more...]

This was the week

January 12, 2009 by Greg Sandow

(So many things that cross my mind I never blog about. Here are last week's, though some are earlier...)Evening musicI was driving last Thursday night, and listening to WNYC's Evening Music show, aka the flagship classical program on New York public radio. (Which I've blogged about before.) Since they play so much new music, and also music that isn't even classical, I'm ready for anything when I turn it on. I even once encountered a cheesy -- delightfully cheesy -- horror-movie score.But on Thursday, Terrance McKnight, the host, was playing … [Read more...]

A new spirit (Where we stand, part 2)

January 9, 2009 by Greg Sandow

The second of five posts about the current state of classical music. This one is about some good news. I think there's a new spirit in the air -- a new openness to classical music. I first noticed it in commercials. I could even go back a few years, to something I didn't understand at the time, a commercial for the Starz movie channel that featured the big tune from Beethoven's Ninth, with people singing, "Movies, movies, movies, movies." Try it for yourself. It's insane. What were they thinking? Or so I asked myself. What's the connection … [Read more...]

Where we stand (more)

January 7, 2009 by Greg Sandow

Here's a supplement to my last post, while I prepare the next installment in the series. I wrote a "where we stand" last year, in considerable detail. Here it is, needing just a bit of revision and amplification to be up to date. Or you can download it as a PDF, I'll revise it a bit very shortly, since I'm going to assign it this semester in my Juilliard and Eastman courses on the future of classical music.And as I neglected to say in my last post -- comments are very, very welcome. We're all in this together.NumbersSeems like the classical … [Read more...]

Where we stand, 2009

January 3, 2009 by Greg Sandow

A happy new year to everyone. Hope you all had revitalizing holidays, and that 2009 will be everything you want it to be. Or else something even better than you hoped.I thought I'd start the year, blogwise, with an overview -- in five posts -- of where I think classical music stands right now. This opening entry will summarize some things you may have read here before, but later posts will have quite a lot that's new.So where are we, as we start 2009? Understanding, of course, that the economy is a wild card -- maybe a ferocious wild card -- … [Read more...]

And to all a…

December 23, 2008 by Greg Sandow

...wonderful holiday season. I've been much distracted with family -- a good distraction. I'll return to blogging in the new year, with the conclusion of our disconnect discussion, or at least the conclusion for now; these things are ongoing. (Read the many comments to the post I've linked, and look here, too).And also, in the new year:   -- a post about some good news: the image of classical music is changing in the U.S., and very much for the better;   -- a look at where we are right now, with classical ticket sales up … [Read more...]

Another subject for an opera

December 19, 2008 by Greg Sandow

A followup to my post about The Money Shot, a noir thriller I thought would make a fabulous -- and maybe pathbreaking -- opera.But it would be pathbreaking only because -- in the manner of Tarantino's Kill Bill films -- it's so sexy and violent. And also, maybe, because of its implicit rock & roll ambience, which then would have to be central to its musical language. But in other respects, it's conventionally operatic. And I also take to heart Jay Langguth's remark, in a comment to my post, about noir not being the only contemporary … [Read more...]

The day the

December 19, 2008 by Greg Sandow

In The Day the Earth Stood Still, there are two moments we might think about, for the future of classical music. (And, by the way, I think it's better than most of the critics thought, though maybe I'm just a sucker for sentiment, and it certainly has really dumb lapses in logic and common sense.)(Spoilers follow, though if you know science fiction and watch the first 20 minutes or so of the film, I doubt you'll be surprised by anything I reveal, especially if you've seen the original.)The first moment comes when Keanu Reeves, as the alien … [Read more...]

Naive

December 15, 2008 by Greg Sandow

Went to two Elliott Carter concerts in Washington this weekend, neither much good. Not Carter's fault; weak performances. Sent me running back to the old Arthur Weisberg recording of the Double Concerto. Precise, expressive, musical, informed, and above all -- in great contrast to the Carter concerts I went to -- clear. (I'm starting to think that the striking virtuosity of 1970s new music groups like Speculum Musicae and Weisberg's Contemporary Chamber Ensemble has now migrated to eighth blackbird and the Bang on a Can All-Stars and Alarm Will … [Read more...]

Ornaments good and bad

December 13, 2008 by Greg Sandow

I've enjoyed the comments on my post about ornamentation and rubato in past centuries. And I certainly agree with a point at least one commenter made, that when musicians (in the old days or now) change what the composer wrote, they can do it well or badly. But that, at least to me, doesn't reflect badly on ornamentation as a practice. We judge all kinds of things about performances, and this just adds another element. If we flag it as especially troublesome -- as if it's worse to change the composer's written notes in a bad way than it would … [Read more...]

Another disconnect

December 10, 2008 by Greg Sandow

Well, we seem to have moved from disconnects -- classical music not connecting to the world around us -- to ornamentation, and (this would be one way to put it) classical music not connecting to its own past. I'm happy to see so many comments, and I'll have something of my own to add in not too long. But I want to return for some last thoughts on disconnects, in this and one more post. I'll also have to  make my tentative final list of disconnects, drawing on ideas from so many of you, which I hope you'll also supply in reaction to the new … [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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