By Colin Dabkoski via the Buffalo News ArtsBeat blog:
In this week's issue of The New Yorker, music critic Alex Ross takes stock of the decline in the public appetite for classical music in America. In his column (unavailable online for non-subscribers), Ross cites a recent study released by the National Endowment for the Arts, a problematic document which I wrote about last month. The study shows, rather unsurprisingly, that audiences for classical music are in the midst of a protracted dive that, for a host of reasons, classical music institutions have not been able to stall or reverse.
Ross, like the country's orchestras, string quartets, theater and opera companies (and, come to think of it, newspapers), seems to be looking high and low for any approach that might usher a new and younger generation of musical thrill-seekers into the art form's folds. He urged organizations to find "a deeper transformation," asking what ought to be the key question among arts groups of any kind as they search for a way to sustain themselves in the future: "There's a growing feeling in the classical business that the customary way of presenting music must evolve if new devotees are to joint the ranks. But how? Can you refresh the ritual while remaining true to the music?" Read the rest here.
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