I’ve been reading a lot.
A. Lot. I started a PhD last year
and for quite a few months now, I’ve been in my literature review phase where
the objective is to gain an awareness and understanding of the major themes in
scholarship surrounding your chosen topic.
One of the areas of literature I’ve been digging into is concerned with
the demise of classical music, and so I read today with interest an article by
Philip Hensher with the title, Will nobody mourn the death of classical music?
It was, as death-of-classical-music articles go, standard fare: society is changing, declining audiences,
nobody cares anymore, who will be listening in 100 years etc etc. Whilst there is evidence that suggests that both
society, and consequently audiences for classical music, are changing, I wanted
to point out something that was absent from Hensher’s list of concerns about
the health of classical music.
It has to do with what his article reveals about some of the
biases of classical music through what he doesn't say. In this case I’m writing about the biases that
get in our way. I'm tired of reading
about people who are mourning the death of classical music, or talking about
declining standards when they could be writing constructively about the issue
from another angle. A more illuminating
angle that would make classical music sound like less of a hard luck case,
heading for extinction.
What about an article, for example, from the perspective of the
generation of musicians who are caught up in the middle of what amounts to a
major paradigm shift, that will be at least or probably more influential than the
industrial revolution, and the creative ways they are responding to the changing priorities of
our society? When you consider the
magnitude of the shift we are experiencing, Hensher doesn't even begin to articulate what's really
going on. Nor does he mention the people
who will really make a difference to the classical music equation. I love the Proms, but a big classical music
festival isn’t going to ‘save’ the art form.
It will be the vast body of unrecognised talent that is largely unfunded
(see the recent Australia Council review for an estimate of the
dollar value of this unfunded talent in the independent sector - and that's just people who apply for grants). In that sense I find Hensher’s article highly
disrespectful to all the artists I know who do brilliant work, are often underpaid
for it, and whose contribution to the artistic life of their communities goes
largely unremarked. Maybe the problem
isn't one of declining interest in classical music. Maybe it's more about the limited interest we
show, through our broader discourse, in the people who are quietly saving classical
music one person at a time.