Sunday 19 September 2010

Just how many do you need for a Symphony of a thousand?



Strangely unsettling picture of the month
Sorry - couldn't resist this. We went to Carcassonne in the south west of France for our hols this summer and, by chance, arrived in the middle of one of the city's many festivals. In addition to many visiting bands there were plenty of local folk groups, many of which included bagpipes. But when I say bagpipes, we're not talking about the tartan-trimmed version used in Scotland, nor the discreet Northumbrian incarnation; no, we're talking about something that leaves little to the imagination regarding the raw materials. When it gets played it looks distinctly odd. It might get you arrested in some countries!
I went to Birmingham this weekend. My wife Deb and I took the opportunity to drop into the Electric Cinema (the UK's oldest, where you can sit on a sofa at the back and have tea and cake whilst you watch) to hear Baba Brinkman's Rap Guide to Evolution (not as mad as it sounds) and to haul ourselves round the Bull Ring in search of autumn clothes.

But the real reason we were there was to hear Mahler's 8th Symphony performed by the City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra under their Music Director Andris Nelsons. Those of you who have seen Andris conduct will not be surprised to hear that it was stunning and that the evening had several moments of music that were so overwhelming you had to remember to breathe afterwards.

Whilst we were waiting for the performance to begin I did a quick head count of the performers. The famous 'Symphony of a Thousand' was really about half that number, but that's still a heck of a lot of orchestral players, soloists and choir members and, I had to admit sadly, too many probably for our own hall to accomodate. I wondered about this because in two years time we'll actually be celebrating the 10th anniversary of the Hallé's residency in Nottingham and I'll be beginning discussions with them next week about what should be in the programme. Obviously you'd want Sir Mark Elder (as much as possible) and Markus Stenz, but what pieces of music would do justice not only to the Hallé's achievements here, but also to the close ties between the orchestra, the Royal Concert Hall and the audiences that have taken the Hallé to their hearts.

It looks like Mahler 8 would be out on purely logistic grounds. But what about pieces that show off the Hallé's particular strengths - Elgar, Strauss etc. - or those with whom Sir Mark is closely associated, such as Verdi and Wagner. We might not be able to do Mahler 8 but maybe the Verdi Requiem? If there's going to be a gala event (which I'm sure there will) then what's an appropriately celebratory piece?

So, plenty to mull over during the coming months. In the meantime I'm taking a bigger than usual interest in the ticket sales for the coming season, mainly because I took a bit of a bold step and increased the size of the orchestral season, whilst also adding a piano series. It's possible that the timing could have been better (one look at the newspaper front pages any day of the week will tell you that!) and I'm bracing myself for a long slog up to 27 May next year. Word from other venues is that booking is later this year. Now we have to wait and see if they're just slower...or lower!

Fingers crossed, the positive feedback I've had about next season will translate into big audiences, but you never know in this game. The first time I worked on Nottingham Classics back in 2005 the mighty London Symphony Orchestra had one of the lowest audiences that season whilst in 2009 the Hallé played Nielsen's 5th Symphony to over 2000 people - a concert for which Peter Bolton and I predicted an audience just over half that size. Let's hope that that spirit of adventure continues next year. It'll certainly reduce my stress levels if it does.

Do feel free to send me your suggestions for Hallé 10th anniversary concerts. I can't promise that you'll find them taking pride of place in 2012-2013 but I'd certainly be intersted to hear them.
That's all folks!
Neil










4 comments:

Unknown said...

Alpine Symphony please?

Chris B said...

Preferably not the Verdi for me, thanks!

Chris B said...

Neil, Did you take note of Sir Mark's deliberate hint in his first pre-concert talk? He'd surely love to give us a Shostakovitch symphony?!

Elena Gilbert said...

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