Brains in gear versus bums on seats


Following a crisis in the Australian film industry during the 1980s the media figure and sometime film producer Philip Adams suggested that film-makers should no longer aim for 'bums on seats' but instead should strive to put 'minds in gear'. Classical music's top heavy business model dictates that it remorselessly pursues a futile strategy of unadventurous bums on seats programming - how many Mahler symphonies does it take to fill the Albert Hall? But as Stéphane Degout pointed out here recently, listeners have a very wide range of gear ratios at their disposal. It just needs some visionaries within classical music to depress the clutch and engage those gears. My recent mind in gear listening has included the newly released and truly visceral double CD of music for cello by Pascal Dusapin played by Arne Deforce. Now listen to music that really engages the gears via this link.

This post is a comp-free zone. Any copyrighted material is included as "fair use" for critical analysis only, and will be removed at the request of copyright owner(s). Also on Facebook and Twitter.

Comments

Graeme said…
I suppose I speak as one whose best musical encounters were in small spaces such as the Wigmore Hall or the small hall at the Concertgebouw. Bigger does not mean the most musically interesting or emotionally compelling. I love it when a singer or player realises that you can sometimes get a bigger effect by playing softly and drawing the audience into your private world.

Recent popular posts

A Philippa Schuyler moment

The truth about those French orchestras

Vonnegut gets his Dresden facts wrong

No flowers please for Herbert von Karajan

You say Mariinsky - I say Mravinsky

Britten – music does not exist in a vacuum

There is more than one War Requiem

The power of music blogs - and poetry

John Lennon beyond the Maharishi

Instruments of extreme beauty