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In America, GIs returning from war to a free college education and a small-town life demanded orchestral concerts of the kind they had heard abroad. The late Russell Johnson, who became the world's foremost concert hall acoustician, told me that he first heard an orchestra when he was in khaki fatigues in Manila and knew instantly that he would never go back to join his father in a blue-collar job. A symphony concert represented aspiration for postwar millions.

Soon, however, the audience grew confused. Modernism introduced a complexity to the concert diet that was beyond the reach of the "ordinary" listener and often painful to the ear. At the onslaught of Webern, Cage, Stockhausen and late Stravinsky, Mr Smeeth and his kind came to feel belittled and unwanted and orchestras struggled with conflicting demands to renew the repertoire and not alienate the audience.

In Europe, supported by growing amounts of state funding — the London Symphony Orchestra went from a £2,000 annual grant in 1949 to more than £2 million today — they could afford a measure of experiment, the occasional half-empty house. Many adapted artistic obligation to social opportunity and cultivated an elite audience, acquiring an unheralded role in the intellectual life of city and society. On to this base they added elements of public education and social outreach, which pleased the politicians and strengthened their appeal to big business.

In 2011 the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra receives a record 15 million euros in city subventions, almost half its 34 million euro budget (and more than double the total grant to four London orchestras). Berlin's business is augmented by a 6 million euro grant from Deutsche Bank for education and digital outreach. It is also an aggressive player for record fees from tour and festival organisers. A residency in London is now so costly that the rival South Bank and Barbican centres had to collaborate in procuring it. In May, the Berlin Philharmonic announced it was leaving the Salzburg Easter Festival after receiving a bigger offer from Baden-Baden.

Such is life at the top for the privileged few. Lower down the leagues, with the collapse of record income and the onset of unforeseen demographic change, orchestras found themselves in a fight for survival. Germany, after unification, managed the decline rather well, reducing the number of symphony and chamber orchestras from 170 to 133 by quiet attrition. The number of ensemble jobs for musicians has fallen from 12,159 in 1992 to 9,992 in 2010. The ructions triggered in Holland were consensually avoided.

In Britain, one chamber orchestra has come within days of going under. Nevertheless, contrary to predictions, audiences have grown in two years of economic recession, and in some instances diversified. Cool young artists like Lang Lang, Gustavo Dudamel and the American composer Nico Muhly attract a significantly different audience to mainstream venues and a sensation of generational renewal.

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TomW
June 30th, 2011
6:06 PM
Nice Norman - you write exactly what the 4% of the population who regularly attend symphonic concerts want to read. Back in the between the 1780s to the late 1800s, orchestras were ventures funded by subscribers and rich patrons. As a result, there weren't very many of them compared to today. What's happening today is that we're returning to that old model. Government is getting out of the culture business (wisely, for government shouldn't prop up all kinds of bad contemporary composers, painters, writers, etc. as they do in Europe). Sure the orchestra will survive, but there will be about 60% fewer - at least - of them then there are today. That's fine, since excellently recorded CD's and good stereo sets will make up the slack. Besides, the future of art music isn't "orchestras" but in specialized ensembles, such as L'Arpeggiata, Orchestre Revolutionaire et Romantique, and the Red Fish cafe. The idea that every city above 100,000 people should have an orchestra or opera company is going the way of the dodo.

Charles
June 30th, 2011
7:06 AM
Living in a somewhat distant northern suburb of New York City, I find a rich local diet of chamber music along with imaginative choral programs sung by amateurs led by accomplished professionals and supported by churches. Smaller scale classical music will never go out of fashion and doesn't need large endowments. A lot of it is supplied by musicians who can't find orchestral chair jobs in the cities. Bach did fine in an environment like this with its smaller scale forces. What was OK for him is OK for us...not to worry.

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