This question has been posed recently in the debate about
public spending cut-backs in Northern Ireland.
Following several years of reduced financial support, the Ulster Orchestra
is in danger of closure.
The argument
goes that spending on culture is a low priority and the music of Beethoven and
Tchaikovsky benefits an elite group only.
Define elitism
Is it the orchestra which is elite, is it the music, or
could it be the audience?
They hold the purse strings.
For the purposes of this article and because it
is governed by the same Department as culture, sport provides a better definitional clue.
In the professional era of twenty-first century
competitiveness, there is microscopic focus on the miniscule margins which
determine success, what separates winners from losers. Large sums are invested in programmes devised
by elite coaches to hone teams of elite athletes.
There is nothing pejorative in this usage. The word contains no connotation of poshness
or exclusivity. The financial backers as
well as the supporters of such athletes aspire to have teams and individuals
who represent their town, region or nation to be the best, to be elite
performers.
Investors and fans take pride in new players recruited
from exotic foreign destinations. They
are flattered that their team and city are good enough to attract quality
players.
The civic pride that wells up
when, for example, our elite boxers win gold medals at major championships justifies
the investment.
Is there any reason why this principle should not apply
equally to our musical performers? Investors,
management and supporters want our orchestra - the team of professional
musicians - to be the very best they can present, to perform well on their
field of play, the big stage.
The orchestra
The Ulster Orchestra’s team is multi-national, with
players from countries such as Spain, Italy and Hungary teaming up with Irish
and British musicians, and led by international maestros.
Its chief conductor Rafael Payere began his
career in the Simon Bolivar Youth Orchestra (Venezuela’s El Sistema education
project) whose musicians grew up in Bogota’s deprived favellas.
The Ulster Orchestra has received standing ovations at
recent sold-out concerts featuring the Tchaikovsky prize-winning pianist from
Belfast, Barry Douglas; and again at St Anne’s Cathedral performing Benjamin
Britten’s War requiem alongside Dublin’s RTE Concert Orchestra as well as three
choirs.
It performed to a nationwide
audience at the Proms in London’s Royal Albert Hall in September.
Live music at its very best.
The Ulster Orchestra projects a positive
image of an outward-looking creative Northern Ireland and brings people
together as one community.
The Orchestra’s musicians benefit 25,000 school-children
annually. They work on schemes in disadvantaged
communities. They deliver music therapy
to special needs schools and care homes.
Chief conductor Rafael Payere with the Paper Orchestra |
As senior management has been holding intensive discussions with funders, an Ulster Orchestra campaign (Hands Up for the Orchestra) has
produced many thousands of painted hands, an artistic petition from the children of
Northern Ireland to save their orchestra[2].
The orchestra's little-heralded education and outreach work has been operating for a few decades.
It is
the antithesis of elitism.
The music
If it’s not the orchestra that is elitist, could it be
the music?
Perhaps the impression may be
that classical music is elitist compared to rock and pop, jazz, or folk
music.
That proposition deserves closer
examination.
Classical music deals with the same themes as country and
western, blues, rock, jazz, R&B, and folk music. Each form interprets them in their own distinctive
ways.
They are the perennial topics of
love, sorrow, war, peace, protest, beauty, horror, triumph, despair, betrayal,
hope, joy.
Music is about story-telling,
through songs and tunes about the age-old concerns that preoccupy everybody,
rich and poor, old and young. Television
soap operas, films in the cinema, stage plays, books, opera, art all do the
same thing in order to communicate emotions to anybody who will listen.
Nobody is excluded.
Rock and pop
Some of the most popular songs, mega-hits, going right
back to the early days of rock 'n’ roll have been inspired by classical music. Examples will prove the point.
The melody of Elvis Presley’s “It’s Now or Never” bears an uncanny resemblance to “O Sole Mio.” This classical aria was composed by Eduardo
di Capua and made famous by the opera singers Mario Lanza and Enrico Caruso.
The same melody was used in a popular television
advertisement for ice-cream – Just one cornetto. Sing it now.
Procul Harum’s haunting number one hit from 1967, “A Whiter Shade of Pale” takes its lead
from J S Bach’s Air on a G String.
The Beach Boys 1979 song “Lady Lynda” starts and finishes with the Bach cantata Jesu Joy of Man’s Desiring.
The early nineteenth century violinist Niccolo Paginini’s Caprice in A Minor has
inspired classical composers including Schumann, Liszt, Brahms, and
Rachmaninov.
In 1978, a rock’n roll
version was released in an album entitled “Variations” composed by Andrew Lloyd
Webber. He did this as a bet with his
brother, the classical cellist Julian.
He had promised to do so if their local football team Leyton Orient were
relegated down a division. They were and
he did.
One of the Lloyd Webber rock
variations became the signature tune for the popular television programme The
Southbank Show.
Variations LP album cover 1978 |
Examples of pop music’s inspiration by classical music
from recent years include:-
·
the chorus chord progression of Oasis’s “Don’t Look Back in Anger” borrows from Pachelbel’s Canon;
·
On Muse‘s song “Plug in baby,” the guitar riff resembles Bach’s organ music Toccata and Fugue in D minor;
·
Radiohead’s Exit music for a film on their album “OK Computer” weaves in the theme from Chopin’s Prelude no.4 in E minor; and
·
The American R&B singer Janelle Monae’s 6
minute song “Say You’ll Go”
references Debussy’s Claire de Lune. It does so by finishing with a beautiful
musical quotation straight from the French composer’s melody.[3]
The progressive rock band, Emerson Lake and Palmer devoted
a whole album to an interpretation of the Russian composer with the least elite
first name I can think of, Modest Mussorgsky, and his Pictures at an
Exhibition.
They also recorded a double
LP entitled “Works” in 1977.
This prog rock album included a full piano
concerto in three movements composed by Keith Emerson playing the piano and
accompanied by the London Philharmonic Orchestra. Another track entitled “The Enemy God” includes an excerpt from the second movement of
Prokofiev’s “The Scythian Suite.”
“Works” best known track is “Fanfare for the Common Man.”
ELP’s rock version is an arrangement of the classical American composer
Aaron Copeland’s symphony of the same name.
What could be further removed from elitism than a fanfare for the common man?
What could be further removed from elitism than a fanfare for the common man?
Folk music and jazz
Many classical composers have taken their inspiration from their nations' folk songs. Smetana for example was
“an ardent advocate of
Czech culture...he returned home from Sweden to devote himself to the cultural
revival that was sweeping through Bohemia.... His opera The Bartered Bride was
full of folk-like melody...and the melody in Ma Vlast’s Vltava is often thought
to be a Czech folksong and was published in folksong collections.”[4]
The Slavonic Dances of his compatriot Dvorak
“reinvented and restyled
Czech melodies symphonically. It
includes Czech as well as Ukrainian, Slovak, Polish and Serb dances.”[5]
Other examples of folk music's influence on classical composers include:
·
Chopin’s
polonaises and his mazurkas derive from the folk dancing traditions of Poland[6];
·
the
Karelia Suite and Finlandia composed by Sibelius were influenced by Finland’s folk
songs;
·
Ralph
Vaughan Williams “travelled into the countryside to collect folk songs and
carols from singers, notating them for future generations...[7]”was
a collector of English folk music which influenced his compositions;
·
Aaron
Copeland’s Appalacian Spring is
derived from an American folk hymn.
·
Franz
Liszt’s Hungarian Rhapsodies
originate in the country’s “folk music as it was taken up and developed by
Gypsy bands for uproarious town entertainment.[8]”
·
Brahms
used German student drinking songs in his Academic Festival Overture.
If classical music is so elitist, why do Cockneys refer to classical composers in describing someone who has drunk too much? Brahms and Liszt.
USA composers have been strongly influenced by jazz. George Gershwin's Rhapsody in Blue and Porgy and Bess derive from New Orleans jazz.
This has worked both ways as virtuosic jazzmen like Oscar Petersen and Duke Ellington have jazzed up Gershwin's classical originals.
·
Jazz
and Spanish folk music influenced Maurice Ravel’s Bolero (used by Torvill and Dean when skating to a gold medal in
the 1984 Sarajevo Winter Olympics and it played an climactic part in the film “10” starring Dudley Moore and Bo
Derek).
·
Shostakovitch’s
work includes a Suite for Jazz Orchestra;
·
his
compatriot Rimsky-Korsakov’s Capricio
Espagnol is a set of “tunes firmly founded on Spanish folk idioms.[11]”
·
Max
Bruch’s Scottish symphony and
Mendelssohn’s the Scottish Symphony and the Hebrides or Fingal’s cave (on the Isle of Staffa) Overture reflect Gaelic Scottish airs.
Paddy Moloney is the uileann piper of the Chieftains folk group.
He tells an amusing story about the late seventeenth century harpist and composer Turlough Carolan, described as the Irish Mozart (12).
Mr Moloney says that Carolan's 40 minute Concerto resonates in the Concerto for Flute Harp and Orchestra. The Austrian Mozart was born 18 years after Carolan's death (13) and he wrote his concerto when he was 22 years old (14).
Ulster Orchestra at the Proms playing The Riverdance Suite, Royal Albert Hall 2014 |
As folk music and jazz are the traditional melodies of everyday people, what can be the justification to describe its classical derivatives as elitist?
Television and advertising
Examples of the use of classical music on television include:
·
Alan Sugar’s “The Apprentice” uses
Prokofiev’s “The Dance of the Knights”
from the Romeo & Juliet ballet suite as its signature tune;
·
Handel’s “Zadok
the Priest” chorus is heard throughout Europe as the theme for The
Champions League, the elite football competition;
·
the annual Eurovision Song Contest is
introduced with the seventeenth century motet “Te Deum” composed by Marc Antoine Charpentier
·
the aria
“Nessan Dorma” from Puccini’s opera Turandot and sung by Pavorotti was the theme
for the World Cup in Italy in 1998;
·
Bach’s Air on a G String played by Jacques
Loussier advertised Hamlet cigars;[15]
·
Carl Orff’s Carmina Burana O Fortuna has been
used in various advertisements including Carlton draught beer.
If classical music is elitist, why do advertisers use it lavishly
to sell all sorts of products?
Cinema
Films are replete with selections of classical music. Examples
include:-
·
Apocalypse
Now
makes effective use of Wagner’s Ride of the Valkyries;
·
2001
A Space Odyssey plays Johann Strauss II’s The Blue Danube to
emphasise the trajectory of a space ship waltzing through space;
·
Beethoven’s Ode to Joy plays an atmospheric
role in A Clockwork Orange;
·
the Oscar-nominated animated film Johann Mouse,
Tom and Jerry, was inspired and
accompanied by Johann Strauss II composition; and
·
Mozart’s Eine Kleine Nachtmusik is an
important part of the movie Ace Ventura.
Some films use a whole array of classical music.
For instance, the 1999 film The Runaway Bride used JS Bach’s Orchestral Suite number 3 as well as his Cantata “Jesu Joy of Man’s Desiring;” Handel’s Messiah Hallelujah chorus; Haydn’s piano sonata number 33; Mendelssohn’s Midsummer Night’s Dream Wedding March; Mozart’s overture and aria to Le Nozze di Figaro; Pachelbel’s Canon in D Major; Schubert’s Ave Maria; and Wagner’s Wedding March from Lohengrin.
Movie-makers love classical music – could it be because
its audiences do too?
The audience
If accusations of elitism against classical music find no
support in the work of the Orchestra or in classical music’s closeness with
other musical forms or in its prevalent use by film-makers and advertisers, could
it be that elitism applies to the audience?
If elitism means affordability, consider this.
No professional symphony orchestra in Europe charges
less for seats than The Ulster Orchestra.
For example, the cheapest tickets in Amsterdam’s Concertgebouw[16]
are dearer than the Ulster Orchestra’s dearest (£25). The Dutch orchestra’s most expensive seats
cost over £100.
Students can attend Ulster Orchestra concerts for £5, lunchtime
concerts cost £6, choir seats cost £10, there are concession prices for
pensioners, discounts are available in a “pick and mix” scheme for purchases of
four or more events on a rising scale, and concert programmes are free.
Moreover, the concerts produced by the BBC
cost nothing to attend.
The Ulster Orchestra aims to appeal to a wide audience,
to exclude nobody.
That is why its
programme includes the popular New Year Viennese concert featuring dancers from
Strictly Come Dancing; the annual concert celebrating of Burns Night features folk-rock
singers like Eddi Reader and the Gaelic strains of Scottish pipes and drums; other
concerts feature movie music; the free BBC concert on St Patricks Day headlines
with musicians like Clannad, Sinéad O’Connor, and Phil Coulter.
This year’s free BBC concert at the Titanic
Slipway for the BBC’s Last Night at the Proms attracted 50,000 applications for
11,000 tickets.
The orchestra provides workshops for special needs
children, it teaches the musicians of the future at the City of Belfast College of
Music and at Queens University Belfast.
On top of this, it plays music by all of the great composers to inspire and entertain its other audience, our citizens and welcoming visitors back to our long-suffering city.
Supporters began a campaign to Save The Ulster Orchestra when news of the closure threat was revealed by an Assemblyman at Stormont in October.
This audience-led initiative
has extracted 14,000 messages of support from many famous musicians, playwrights - as well as
everyday citizens, from a young busker to elderly pensioners. People power when crisis hits.[17]
Petitioners' comments provide compelling evidence of audience support, moving and eloquent testimony which rebuts allegations of elitism.
One comment in the petition says
“I grew up in Turf Lodge.... We
were not well off. The Ulster Orchestra
has never been elitist: when I was at
primary school the Orchestra played in St Teresa’s Parochial Hall on the Glen
Road in west Belfast in the 1960s...”
A rural person talked about his upbringing living in a Council house in a small village, his introduction to music (which was hearing the Sash and God Save the
Queen), and being instructed at school by Ulster Orchestra musicians until, in
his words:-
“On my 35th birthday I
conducted the Orchestra - my own piece to celebrate the millennium, and the
same year went on to be musical director of Riverdance, touring the world....”
Another supporter refers to her organisation of a concert
following the Omagh bomb in 1998. She
recounts how the event snowballed when she secured the Waterfront Hall and:-
“I contacted the Ulster Orchestra
to ask if they would perform. The answer
was an unequivocal Yes. All the
musicians who took part in the Concert for Omagh performed gratis so that as
much money as possible would go to the fund for the victims and survivors of
the atrocity. And this is how they are
rewarded in their turn? I think not.”
The Ulster Orchestra has done all of this invaluable work
for some 48 years, never once cancelling a concert through all the years of
the Troubles.
Looking at all of the evidence, it is impossible to believe that any of this
melodious activity - the orchestra, its music, the audience - could be classed as elitist.
©Michael
McSorley 2014
[2] http://ulsterorchestra.com/news/children-across-northern-ireland-take-part-in-their-own-save-the-ulster-orc
[4] 3
CD set, sleeve-notes. Smetana Ma Vlast
complete orchestral works, Janacek Philharmonic Orchestra. 2007
[5]
Dvorak Slavonic Dances Royal Philharmonic Orchestra Antal Dorati 1999 CD.
[6] QUB Arts Festival 23/4 Oct 2010 played in
full by Joanna MacGregor
[8]
Liszt Hungarian Rhapsodies LP sleevenotes Vienna State Opera Orchestra. Philips 1958.
[9] UO flash mob St Georges Market Belfast, filmed by Chrissie Harris Productions
http://www.culturenorthernireland.org/article/6822/ulster-orchestra-flash-mob
[10] Chopin “Les Brillantes” double CD Andrzej
Jagodzinski Trio. Belfast Festival at Queens concert 27 Oct 2010
[11] Programme notes Moscow State Symphony
Orchestra concert Waterfront Hall Belfast 22 May 1997
[12] Janet Harbinson’s CD Feasting with Carolan
(The Irish Harp Orchestra)
[13] You Tube Extract
of Carolan’s Concerto played by The Chieftains led by Belfast flautist James
Galway:- http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0MtXjjIcjWE
[14]
CD sleeve-notes James Galway Mozart Concerto for Flute & Harp K299. Marisa
Robles harp. Academy of St Martin in the Fields
[15] http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xbdxm8Ia0Wc
[16] http://michaelmcsorleytravel.blogspot.co.uk/2014/10/the-netherlands.html
Quotation from Simon Rattle in The Times Saturday Review 24 January 2015:-
ReplyDelete"Germany is far from perfect, but here there is an absolute, unspoken assumption that the arts are an essential part of what the country is...the notion that classical music is somehow elitist has to be refuted everywhere..."
I acknowledge BBC archivist Evelyn Ellison who has drawn my attention to 3 BBC NI radio programmes where Paddy Moloney speaks about their music. While there are references to Carolan, these three programmes don't contain the Moloney story about Mozart.
ReplyDeleteFor the record, however, here they are:-
(1) With Bennett: Paddy Moloney Broadcast: 11/12/2011. Paddy Moloney talks about his life and music with John Bennett.
(2) Legends of Irish Music: Broadcast: 20/06/2008. A profile of Paddy Moloney, presented by John Toal, including stretching the boundaries of traditional music with pioneering collaborations with artists such as Ry Cooder.
(3) The Chieftains March On. Broadcast: 31/12/1995. Presented by Seamus McKee. He enjoys The Chieftain’s music in the company of Paddy Moloney and Derek Bell.
Interestingly, apart from the Carolan concerto which is mentioned, this McKee programme refers to film music composed by Paddy Moloney for Tristan and isolde and it played its The Love Theme with James Galway.
In addition Derek Bell described their album collaborating with Breton folk musicians as “traditional/pure/quality...” Celtic Wedding album.