http://www.calendarlive.com/printedition/calendar/cl-ca-artsnotes21aug21,0,2513799,print.story?coll=cl-calendar
Ironically, the same day the New York Times totally ignores the LA Philharmonic in an article about declining audiences for classical music, the LA Times has a nice article about one step the LA Phil is taking to better educate itsgrowing audiences:
MOST of us have had the experience: Interrupting a conversation with our concert-going companion to grab a few hurried moments scanning the program notes. As the lights go down, we've had time to see in what year the composer was born, or whether the symphony was written for Napoleon or an obscure nobleman — and that's about it.
It's a bit like cramming for a particularly difficult college exam, and about as much fun.
Now the Los Angeles Philharmonic has come up with something it considers a solution to the problem: FastNotes, a brief set of program notes to be e-mailed free to interested parties a week or so before a concert. Thanks to the miracle of the Internet, the notes will include links to iTunes and similar websites that will allow FastNotes subscribers to hear a brief passage of the music to be played.
Deborah Borda, the Philharmonic's president, says the computer terminal is a natural place to hit people with musical information. "Where are you more likely to be," she asks, "other than, in L.A., behind the wheel of your car?"
Joan Cumming, the orchestra's director of marketing, says she came up with the idea after speaking to members of the audience and sensing a need. (Of course, the Philharmonic also offers before-concert talks and puts some information on its website before concerts.)
Cumming says the service will be especially valuable for "Beethoven Unbound," the season-long concert series that will pair works by the most famous of all composers with compositions by such contemporary figures as Lindberg, Knussen and Dutilleux, on whom audiences might welcome a primer.
Whoever the composer, she says, "if people can hear a piece of music more than once, especially before they see it in concert, then they can say, 'Oh, I get it.' "
Borda hopes the notes will help give audiences a sense of how concert programs take shape and why she and music director Esa-Pekka Salonen decide to combine certain works and composers during the same evening. "It'll put a window on the juxtapositions, the interrelationships. On how we put the cocktail together — how much vermouth, how much gin, how many olives. You don't take a piece and just put it there: It has to make sense in context, intellectually but also aesthetically."
As of noon Wednesday — just a day after FastNotes had been announced — the service had already enrolled about 2,000 subscribers. The proof of the martini, of course, is in the tasting.
To sign up, go to www.LAPhil.com/FastNotes.
It's also nice to see some other musicians in town performing to more than a small audience:
ReplyDeleteCal Phil blends a satisfying mix of musical genres
By John Farrell
Special to the Press-Telegram
Tonight at the Walt Disney Concert Hall, the California Philharmonic Orchestra and its Music Director Victor Vener continue their summer concert series with "Not That's Entertainment," a mix of film music, television themes and great operatic and classical vocal music.
Soprano Elissa Johnston will join the orchestra for the "Four Last Songs' of Richard Strauss, and will also sing "O, Silver Moon," from Dvorak's opera "Rusalka," one of the loveliest of operatic melodies.
The program will also include "Singin" in the Rain" from the film, and "The Young Person's Guide to Television," a medley of television themes. There is also music from Webber's "Phantom of the Opera' and music from "Fiddler on the Roof."
"The program I have created continues to mix great serious classical works, like Strauss'Last Songs," with popular works like 'Singin' in the Rain," " Vener said in a recent telephone interview. "The music from 'Fiddler on the Roof" and 'My fair Lady' is wonderful, and everyone loves it. And everyone will recognize the television themes. But the great classical works will balance them out and the Dvorak 'O, Silver Moon' is one of the great melodies ever written."
Cal Phil's Disney Hall concerts have become so popular that today the orchestra will be opening seating in the balcony and in the choir section behind the orchestra to satisfy the growing demand, Verner said. (8-14-05)