Classically Inspired

Thoughts, musings and ideas about Classical music in London and Hull 
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The National Plan for Music Education

Now that I’ve had the opportunity to read this and seen that the general consensus is a positive one amongst other commentators, I thought I’d add my two pennies worth.

As others have already mentioned, this new plan has some really good things in it.  A sense that the government has listened to what has previously been recommended in the Henley Review. Despite the inclusion of positive initiatives, which I’ll be talking about further down, I didn’t read this wearing rose tinted glasses (just my normal ones). There are some worrying aspects to this report; ones that I hope will be overcome or at least not be how I think it’ll turn out.

The biggest and by far the thing I’m most excited about and conversely afraid for is the provision that ALL pupils aged between 5-18 (state and free schools) will have the opportunity to take up an instrument. And all pupils to be given class based tuition on their instruments. Great stuff, the right to ask to play an instrument and no reason for teachers or schools to refuse or fob them off. I have to ask just how much choice pupils will get in what instrument they learn, for I can’t help but have visions of the mass orders for plastic recorders being made by schools, to save money and fulfil the requirements the plan states must be met. Recorder, triangle and tambourine manufacturers must be rubbing their hands with glee thanks to this report!

What is important in the report is the recognition that “[music] must not become the preserve of those children whose families can afford to pay for music tuition”(p3) and that through music the disadvantaged can benefit most. I guess this all correlates with the opportunity for all to learn an instrument.

The music services currently in place will continue until September 2012, when they will be disbanded at least in name and Music Education Hubs will be responsible for funding and providing opportunities the plan sets out to achieve.

 

Essentially the plan sets out to:

 

  • All children to be given the chance to learn an instrument, to learn to sing and be able to progress to an advanced level if they wish.
  • Teachers to have greater freedom in how they teach music in school (within the guidelines of a “broad and balanced curriculum”)
  • New Music Education Hubs will replace the current work of Local Authority Music Services by Sept 2012, combining the services of local hubs, schools and private providers.
  • A new monitoring board to hold hubs to account for the quality and consistency provided on a national scale.
  • Support music education across the age range for both inside and outside school activities.
  • Whole class ensemble teaching programmes, opportunities to play in other ensembles and to provide clear progression routes.
  • Music technology to be supported to support the extension of good music teaching.
  • Music Hubs to assess local needs via schools and provide clear communication to parents/carers.
  • IN HARMONY Sistema England to be expanded to support more children from more disadvantaged backgrounds to achieve their full potential, beyond the areas already covered (Lambeth, Liverpool and Norwich).
  • Funding for Music services/Hubs to be scaled down from April 2012 in three staged years £77m 2012, £65m 2013, £60m 2014.

 

 

 So I left the best for last: Music Education will be trying to achieve more than it does already with less funding than it gets now. The arguments that this will not negatively impact upon services are based upon the new funding model based on a per pupil basis. Affluent areas with more funds but less pupils will accordingly receive less funding and areas with more pupils but proportionally less funding will get more.  I can see the logic in this to be honest, doing things the Robin Hood way but why not just keep the funding the same and still fairly divide it?

Think about it, there’s a basic problems with all this: they are trying to make more things happen than before but with less money than before, I can’t help but think something here will go badly wrong, some part of the plan will be dumped, swept under the carpet and quietly forgotten about. And that’s why I worry about the Recorders…because that’s all I had and I grew up under the last Conservative government (ok this time it’s a coalition, but still).

Sistema England’s In Harmony project is a great thing, helping lots of children to learn an instrument and be part of something that gives them a positive goal to aim for. The fact that the government has seen the benefits being a part of a orchestra has had and provided funding (included in the total funding amounts) to expand the project is great news, I fully welcome this and hope that maybe from a purely selfish point of view Hull is considered as a future participant.

Any local Arts organisation can apply to become their local music Hub, but there are certain provisions and requirements, and most likely a hell of a lot of red tape involved to probably make it very likely that a fair few local authority Music Services will apply and win the right to become a Hub for their local area. Collaborations are encouraged and therefore the hope is Hub to Hub to Orchestra to Hub to Hubs may be envisioned. Well it would be a good thing to hope for.

The Plan is freely available for you to download and read from the Department for Education's website here

Filed under  //   Music Education   classical concerts   classical music  

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A piece in the paper (or to Hull and back part two)

My first week at Hub Westminster and I can already see progress ahead for this blog.

My trip to Hull (and back) last week was quite good, although I didn't attend any concerts. My father noticed that their was a quarter page piece in the local paper about an upcoming concert that is actually being held tonight by the Warsaw Philharmonia Orchestra. Tickets were from £20.50(!) and featured Violinist Kuba Jakowicz, a respected and successful Violinist but not really someone to wet your pants about, despite what the paper said!

A good piece in the paper, good publicity (well it was an advertising piece), and great music for those attending their first concert, but I still think a bit too expensive for the average person to fork out for. Why pay £20.50 for one ticket when that could be spent on nearly four cinema tickets, sixish pints of lager, nearly four trips to Monkey Bizness (childrens adventure centre thing), and for me two return trips to Hull!

I do wonder how many people attend these concerts? For how long do they need to be advertised to sell/break even? It's a pity if they don't sell that well, but then again I may be completely wrong and relived to find out these concerts sell like hot cakes!

As an aside: Travelling to Hull from London has become cheaper and somewhat easier to do at last minute, so hopefully I shall be making more short visits on a semi regular basis.

Filed under  //   classical concerts   hull  

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To Hull and Back part one

Just a quick message to say, early tomorrow morning I'm heading back to Hull for a few days, mainly visiting family, but I'm also going to use this opportunity to see whats happening. I'll be sniffing out up coming concerts, and other opportunities/events that engage with the public. I'll be reporting back here, but for now it's late and I have an early start in the morning so must stop writing for now. 

Filed under  //   Hull   classical concerts   family concerts   outreach  

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The (un)cultured classes

Lynsey Hanleys recent article in the 'Comment is free' section of The Guardians website, "The cultured classes" (19/2/10) paints a rather depressing situation in our schooling system. The implication being that unless you are from a middle class background, the presumption by teachers is that pupil have very few cultural extra-curricular activities. I would really love to refute this, and argue that teachers look on every child as an individual open to all possibilities, however my own personal experience from my time at school finds the opposite true.

If a child does not take instrument lessons at school, can that child be said to have an aptitude towards music? Maybe that child does, but doesn't know how to ask for lessons, or did ask and was politely told no (that is my case, and yes I'm still a bit bitter that the teacher thought I couldn't do it and told me "it was a nice idea..but.."). You don't even have to have lessons just to enjoy music, but many presume instrumental lessons are a pre-requisit to enjoyment.

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Filed under  //   Hull   London   classical concerts   family concerts   outreach  

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How many London based Orchestras have played in Hull since 1980? - part two

Last month I submitted a question to Hull City Council on the What do they know site, a site which allows anyone to request information held by a public body. I asked Hull City Council to provide me with the names of London based orchestras who have played at Hull City Hall (the main concert venue in Hull, run by the council) since 1980. They had until 22nd March to respond with the information requested. 

I received the information on 9th March and am grateful that they responded before the deadline. I was however told that Hull City Council do not hold records before 2000, so all the information I received is dated after this date.

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Alex Ross "Inventing and Reinventing the Classical Concert"

On Monday 8th March, Alex Ross the author of The rest is noise gave the annual lecture of the Royal Philharmonic Society at Wigmore Hall, London. I was in the audience, hoping to hear how classical music could guarantee its future. In the end I was disappointed, not utterly but his talk certainly left me wondering. 

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Filed under  //   London   classical concerts  

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Vivaldi recital stopped by Attendents at the Pantheon

It's just shocking that this could happen: a concert being cut short by the attendents because the Pantheon was due to close at 6pm and the concert would have finished 15 minutes later. Good job it was caught on camera.

Filed under  //   classical concerts   culture  

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How to sell classical music to the masses - Times Online

 

From
March 4, 2010

A great article in the Times today by Laura Silverman, about how the Classical music industry can move with the times and deal with the problem of maintaining current audiences while at the same time attracting newer ones

Link to article

How to sell classical music to the masses

The cream of British talent suggest how they would transform the traditional concert for a new audience

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It’s almost akin to a papal pronouncement. On Monday the world’s most influential classical music critic, Alex Ross, will deliver the annual Royal Philharmonic Society lecture to the assembled cognoscenti at the Wigmore Hall in London, entitled Inventing and Reinventing the Classical Concert. Ross’s book The Rest is Noise, a provocative assessment of 20th-century music, was shortlisted for a Pulitzer prize in 2008. Now he is turning his gaze on the concert experience itself. In the US, where Ross writes on classical music for The New Yorker, orchestras are under more scrutiny than ever, facing declining revenue and ageing audiences. The time has come, Ross says, to rethink the way that Brahms, Beethoven and Bruckner are presented.

Plenty of rethinking has already gone on in the UK. The Southbank Centre encourages cross-genre events, recently supporting Anna Meredith’s new concerto for beatboxer and orchestra. The Barbican puts orchestral scores to films — on Monday night a screening of Mikio Naruse’s 1933 silent film Nightly Dreams had a soundtrack by Nitin Sawhney. And the Roundhouse’s Reverb series in January, which introduced classical music to a pop venue, played to packed houses. So what is the best way to reinvent the concert? We asked Britain’s classical taste-makers to tell us what they think Ross should say.

Roger Wright, Proms director and controller of BBC Radio 3

late-night concerts at the Proms, where we do an hour of music from 10pm, have been really popular. You don’t have to rush to get there and you’ve had a chance to pick up a sandwich, so you’re not suffering from indigestion. You don’t have to worry about getting home afterwards because it’s not that late. Some of the most magical things at the Proms, such as Messiaen’s Quartet for the End of Time in 2008, have been at this time. There should be weekend coffee-morning concerts and rush-hour concerts and lunchtime concerts at venues throughout the year.

John Gilhooly, director of the Wigmore Hall

I’m 36 and I often ask my peers why they don’t come to more concerts.

Are they put off by the format? Do they think concert halls are too stuffy? “No,” they reply in no uncertain terms. They just work long hours and then can’t find a child minder. Experimentation is a very good way of occasionally reaching out to new audiences, but it should not be made the norm. Audiences want to experience high-quality traditional events in a world that is already dominated by experimentation and celebrity. There is no need to tinker too much with a system that works.

By maintaining quality and consistency we can maintain the long-term future of the species.

Svend Brown, artistic director of Glasgow Concert Halls and the East Neuk Festival

They built a fantastic concert hall here in Perth in 2005 to replace a drafty Victorian hall. Suddenly an orchestral series that had been ailing for years was selling out. The building created a buzz, it made the audience feel welcome, it was comfortable, there were nice bars. There is also a hunger for unconventional spaces. The East Neuk Festival is in a part of Scotland that’s rich in history but lacking in arts venues, so we make a virtue out of spaces we can lay our hands on. In the past few years we’ve used a nuclear bunker, a meadow, a cave, a woodland dell, a harbour-side bench, a Scout hut, a hangar and a barn. The events have had a novelty but also a depth and an authenticity because of the landscape.

One of my desert-island memories is hearing Paul Hillier’s ensemble Theatre of Voices singing Stimmung in a concert hall in the north of Norway. The audience had travelled through deep snow or by boat to be there. They were lying on their backs, zoning out and listening with an intensity I have only rarely encountered: the combination of weird and apt was unforgettable.

Matthew Barley, cellist

Different audiences need different approaches. I did a concert in Winchester prison three years ago to 40 hard-bitten offenders. As soon as I was in the room I realised that if I just started to play my cello there was no way I was going to win this lot over at all — they were tough. I sat there for a few seconds with my heart in my mouth wondering what to do. Then somebody in the crowd looked at my computer set-up and asked what software I was using, so I began talking about music technology and demonstrating how it worked. I ended playing solo Bach. A guy at the back in his sixties had tears running down his face. “I never knew something so beautiful existed,” he said. He wasn’t aware of that type of music. He’d never seen a cello in his life.

Gabriel Prokofiev, classical DJ, composer and grandson of Sergei

The current concert format is old-fashioned. It’s based on rules devised by the bourgeoisie at the turn of the 19th century to protect and elevate their culture. They tried to make it this semi-religious experience, sacred and serious. But in Mozart’s time concerts were more informal: Mozart expected one movement to be played, he didn’t expect a perfect rendition of the whole symphony. I know plenty of people who feel intimidated by a classical concert. They feel as though there’s some sort of code, some sort of language they’re just not worthy of knowing. I went to the ballet to see Romeo and Juliet, by my grandfather. I’m not joking, I turned up a minute late and they wouldn’t let me in. I missed the whole of the first act. That’s part of the formality of these kind of events. Why do they start at 7.30pm? For the past six years I’ve been running classical club nights upstairs in the Horse & Groom pub in Shoreditch, East London. The live music doesn’t start until nine o’clock. There’s a DJ between acts, people can have a drink and chat. If they don’t like the piece they can move to the bar. It’s what people are used to at pop gigs. We’re reaching out to a younger audience.

Marcus Davey, chief executive of the Roundhouse

Authenticity is essential. If you’re doing Mahler’s First Symphony don’t put a rock band in the first 20 minutes just because you think it would engage a younger audience. Just play it as it is. It’s a great piece of art; if we’re ashamed of a work, why do it at all? The aim of the Reverb series was to bring a younger audience to classical music — and did we get a younger audience! The average age was 30 to 35. At the end everybody was hugging each other, going: “That’s the most amazing thing I’ve ever seen.” It was because we said you don’t have to follow normal concert protocol: you can clap between movements, you can take a drink in, you can do what you like, just relax into it. We didn’t reinvent the music at our concerts, we reinvented the way you might feel when you go to them.

James Rhodes, pianist

It’s all about me communicating with the audience as one of them, not as a lecturer or an academic. At the moment you go to a concert, the guy comes on, barely glances at the audience, bows, sits down, plays and then leaves. It’s like the audience is down there and the performer is up here and there’s this huge barrier between them. Musicians should be seen as just like anyone else. When I played at the Roundhouse at the end of last year I told a few jokes to break the ice. I like to talk about what the music means to me, rather than have the audience read something written by some Oxbridge academic 40 years ago about sonata form that doesn’t mean anything to me, let alone to them. I’ll hang out in the bar afterwards. Music deserves to be shared; it’s about that.

Nicola Benedetti, violinist

Much too often the hall is lit as though you’re in a dining room: it’s unatmospheric, unromantic and unartistic. Bright lighting is laziness. If you’re sitting halfway up the hall in the audience it’s even worse: you’re seeing everyone to the left, to the right and in front of you as much as you’re seeing the stage. It’s distracting. I’ve heard people say that if the light’s too low you can’t read the programme, but you shouldn’t be reading the programme while the music’s being played, you should be focused on what’s going on onstage.

Graham Sheffield, artistic director of the Barbican

We are in a visually led age, but there’s often merit in classical music being mind-led rather than eye-led. Occasionally it is worth experimenting, partnering pictures with music, but what ultimately counts is the quality of the music. No amount of digital wizardry can substitute that live experience.

In many cases a bit of loosening up of the audience would help the atmosphere. Until recently people who clapped at the end of a movement were looked at as though they were an alien species. But if the music calls for a response, a smattering of applause is fine. You’re going to get some coughs, so why not have a few claps as well?

Anna Meredith, composer

It’s great to be creative and not necessarily stick to convention, but there’s definitely a place for concerts as they always have been. Experimenting for the sake of it is as bad as not experimenting because you’re scared of it. You’ve got to consider whether presenting the programme in an unusual way will highlight the music or is just gimmicky. For anyone worried that my beatbox concerto is an orchestral piece with a beat underneath it, it’s not. I treated the composition as though I was writing a violin concerto. I’m happy mixing genres — as long as the piece is the most important thing, then that’s fine.

Nitin Sawhney, producer and composer

I want to be constantly pushing boundaries. I see every tradition, including classical music, as dynamic. As long as you respect the form and work cohesively with what you have to add to it then it can only be a good thing to play with it.

Gillian Moore, head of contemporary music, Southbank Centre

 We should be bold in allowing music to resonate with other art forms because music has become abstracted: Masses and requiems have become divorced from a religious context and we have dances where we don’t dance. After the 3-D digital version of Stravinsky’s Rite of Spring that Klaus Obermaier did for us at the end of last year somebody said to me: “All that dance distracted me from the music.” I wanted to say: “It’s a ballet, for God’s sake! It’s a ballet!” How did we get to this state where you can’t dance to ballet?

Alex Ross gives the RPS Lecture at the Wigmore Hall, W1 (Wigmore Hall ; 020-7935 2141), on Monday (7.30pm). The full text of the lecture will be available at Royal Philharmonic Society from March 9

 

Filed under  //   London   Modernisation   classical concerts   outreach  

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How many London based Orchestras have played in Hull since 1980?- Part One


I thought it a good question to ask, just how many London orchestras have played in Hull since 1980? Having discovered via Twitter that the English Chamber Orchestra has not played in Hull since the 1980's, and the London Symphony Orchestra might never have played in Hull, I wondered how many more orchestras have never or not for a long time played in Hull?

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Beethoven's 7th

Over the past two week I have had the opportunity to attend two concert featuring Beethoven's 7th symphony, and the audiences were very different. I attended the Night Shift at the Roundhouse on Friday 29th January and last night at Cadogan Hall I saw the European Doctors' Orchestra. I wanted to wait to see both concerts before I wrote about the Night Shift concert, because it adds a bit of contrast and reflection to what I saw and heard.

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