To my friends on the Graying Lute List:

   Due to a two-century long and world-wide shortage of lute players, we
   can now get into heaven for free!

   Smile,

   George
     __________________________________________________________________

   From: lute-...@new-old-mail.cs.dartmouth.edu
   <lute-...@new-old-mail.cs.dartmouth.edu> on behalf of Nancy Carlin
   <lsaq.edi...@gmail.com>
   Sent: Thursday, August 27, 2020 2:15 PM
   To: howard posner <howardpos...@ca.rr.com>; lutelist Net
   <lute@cs.dartmouth.edu>
   Subject: [LUTE] Re: future of the lute

   Howard is right about the graying of audiences and it's been talked
   about for years here in the US.  I think one problem is that early
   music
   is the poor step-sister of "classical music" - a category that was
   solidified (along with ethnic, folk etc.) back when record stores
   started. It seems to me our music was the pop music of the day, with a
   bit of a division between music for use in church, court and things
   like
   popular ballad tunes. Currently I see a couple larger baroque
   orchestras
   and concert series moving past the baroque, but I also see some
   interesting series who explore putting on concerts in non-traditional
   venues, such as bars and coffee shops. We had an article by Deborah Fox
   a year or so in the Quarterly - about some of the things her Pegasus
   music is doing to encourage a younger audience. Stephen Stubbs in
   Seattle (Pacific Music Works) in Seattle is also doing this.
   I suspect that all this targeted music aimed to fill medium sized
   concert venues will change because of Covid-19. It will level the
   playing field and people will have found out it's very nice to listen
   to
   a well-produced concert on your TV (via YouTube). Recently I have
   listened to online lute concerts by Paul O'Dette, Ronn McFarlane and
   Brandon J Acker.  In each of them there was no ticket price, just a
   suggestion to follow a link to donate on PayPal.  None of those
   concerts
   took place in my part of the continent and I would not have heard them
   without the pandemic. I think this will continue even after we get our
   vaccine. The success of these kind of things will depend on things like
   Facebook spreading to work far and wide as well as people contiruting -
   Brandon Acker has done a great job getting lots of connections on
   Facebook, so has access to his potential audience.
   Nancy
   >> On Aug 27, 2020, at 8:58 AM, Is Milse Póg <ishdai...@gmail.com>
   wrote:
   >>
   >>    I am a young amateur lute player (just 21), so I guess I am a
   part of
   >>    the next generation of players. I think the lute will continue to
   be
   >>    played for the foreseeable future, since there's always someone
   strange
   >>    enough to fall in love with the lute's music and sound, but it's
   sad to
   >>    see little to no young people in ancient music and classical
   music
   >>    concerts in general. Perhaps it has to do with the distance that
   has
   >>    grown between contemporary composers and the general population,
   the
   >>    former usually earning their bread through the academia.
   > It has to do with classical music being a taste that listeners tend
   to acquire as they get older. Old listeners are replaced with lots of
   middle-aged listeners, and not so many young ones.
   >
   > Alarms about the “graying of the classical audience” have been
   sounded for decades, and in the USA probably peaked in 1988. The
   general manager of the public classical music station in Los Angeles
   came back from the Audience 88 conference that year convinced that
   classical music was dying and he had to wean the station away from it.
   He was gone within a year or so. The station was was playing Satie,
   Rossini and Beethoven this morning.
   >
   > It reminds me of the line in the Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy
   that the galactic emperor is “nearly dead and has been for centuries."
   >
   >
   >
   >
   > To get on or off this list see list information at
   > [1]http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/~wbc/lute-admin/index.html
   --
   Nancy Carlin
   Administrator THE LUTE SOCIETY OF AMERICA
   [2]http://LuteSocietyofAmerica.org
   PO Box 6499
   Concord, CA 94524
   USA
   925 / 686-5800
   [3]www.groundsanddivisions.info
   [4]www.nancycarlinassociates.com

   --

References

   1. http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/~wbc/lute-admin/index.html
   2. http://LuteSocietyofAmerica.org/
   3. http://www.groundsanddivisions.info/
   4. http://www.nancycarlinassociates.com/

Reply via email to