Tim

My bad. Call it "encouraging, inviting, embracing, and thrilling" non-traditional audiences.Doc wrote:Does the new music/new composer mold the consumer? I couldn't encourage someone to become a composer if molding the market was their goal.
Agreed. And yet many musicians think that is the purpose of an audience - and their due.Chuck(G) wrote: I find most orchestra and band concerts boring, regardless of the competency of the musicians. After all, what's there for me to do but pay my money and sit there like a dummy and give a standing ovation at the end?
In my area there are quite a few contra dances. And quite a few musicians who provide live music for these dances. For pay. You aren't going to see dances with full orchestras playing Strauss, though. Who could afford that?Chuck(G) wrote: One of the more insane manifestations of passive listening is witness an orchestra playing, say, a Strauss waltz to a bunch of stuffed shirts seated in a hall. This was music that was written and performed for dancing! Even more loony is the orchestra concert that hires professional dancers to waltz on stage. One might as well hire someone to eat for you.
I've long thought that the public interest in orchestral music could be invigorated if the venue's rules of audience decorum (i.e. how you have to behave before you're thrown out on your hindquarters) could be brought into line with other performing arts, such as football, baseball or hockey. Vendors selling ice-cold beer and brats would also be welcome.lgb&dtuba wrote:Agreed. And yet many musicians think that is the purpose of an audience - and their due.
Now that you mention it, doping is exactly how I would describe some of the viola sections I've worked with. And fatheaded conductors. Now if that isn't evidence of steroids, I don't know what is...Chuck(G) wrote:Name ten violinists who have undergone the rigors of doping or illicit steroid use
lgb&dtuba wrote:Chuck(G) wrote: Finding a place that will allow 15-30 musicians to show up weekly and empty their spit valves isn't always easy.
Jim Wagner
Same type of thing we do. Nothing better than the crowd jumping and the band pumping.tubatooter1940 wrote: At cajun-zydeco concerts (even outside), a dance floor is assembled in front of the stage and pretty ladies circulate through the crowd encouraging people to step out and be shown how to do the cajun dances.