Composition Matters
Commissioning, acquiring, rehearsing, and performing new music are a complex processes within the typical orchestra. More often than not, when compared to traditional repertoire, new music is more expensive to produce, requires longer investments of rehearsal time, and is harder to sell to established audiences. Worse still is the inherent disconnect between the two groups of artists that are integral in creating new music: the composer and performer.
Within most orchestral organizations, it isn’t the composer or performer that has the greatest influence when brining new music to today’s audiences. As a result, musicians tend to feel disenfranchised when it comes to the process of bringing a piece of new music to the stage.
During a conversation about the process with a musician in a “Big 5” ensemble, he summed up an attitude which exists among many musicians I’ve talked to these days,
“I love performing new music but I get paid the same amount of money each week regardless of what we play. So tell me why should I care as much about playing new music when all it means for me is longer practice time at home, frustrating rehearsals, smaller attendance, and all the credit goes to our music director so they can go out and gets more guest conducting jobs?
When it’s all said and done, I feel like a cog in a wheel instead of an artist. To top it off, our management tries to make us look like the bad guys when we want to get paid for recording the new piece so composers and music directors can use it to their benefit. I don’t blame the composers over this but why should I care when I have such little vested interest in any of this?”
Why does the disconnect between orchestra musicians and composers exist? Does it need to be this way? In April, 2006, New Music Box conducted a discussion panel on the topic of new music which included two of our panelists for this event. One of the overriding themes from the New Music Box session was a strong desire to create stronger connections between orchestra musicians and composers.
Inspired by an article from Polyphnic.org contributor, Christian Woehr III, Nepotism to Amigo-ism – Can a composer enter an orchestra’s door without holding a conductor’s hand?, this Virtual Discussion Panel brings together composers and orchestra musicians to begin a dialogue that examines the issues behind these attitudes, explores non-traditional methods for increasing points of contact between the two groups, and finds conduits that increase the musician’s vested interest in performing more new music as well as augmenting the role of new music in orchestral repertoire.
Disclaimer: Opinions expressed by the panelists during the Polyphonic.org Negotiations VPD are those of the respective contributors and do not necessarily represent the opinion or position of any organization or association. Neither Polyphonic.org nor the VPD moderator has edited any of the panelist’s contributions. Any change which may appear in panelist’s contributions throughout the course of this VPD is at the request of the respective panelist.
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