Classical music has a branding problem.
For those of us who’ve grown up with Brahms, Bach, Ravel and Strauss, the thought of life without them makes us feel like sad Buster Keaton.
How regrettable that millions of millennials weren’t introduced to classical music as a child, whether because of school budget cuts or symphony bankruptcies or any other symptom of the decline of our institutional and cultural appreciation for the arts.
American orchestras receive a pittance of federal funding through the National Endowment for the Arts. They’re not publicly funded like the dozens of orchestras of Germany, including the Bamberg Symphony, the Freiburger Barockorchester and the iconic Berlin Philharmonic.
Here’s an illustration.
In 2013, the Detroit Symphony Orchestra Hall received $50,000 from the NEA out of $25.8 million awarded nationally. That year, the DSO ran a $31 million budget with nearly $3 million in deficits. That NEA grant amounts to just 0.02 percent of their deficit spending.
In 2010 and 2011, respectively, the Honolulu Symphony Orchestra and Syracuse Symphony Orchestra both filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy. Since then, they’ve regrouped and renamed themselves as the Hawaii Symphony Orchestra and Symphoria. But the struggle isn’t over.
Philip Kennicott of New Republic explains:
“For decades, orchestras operated on a subscription model, a kind of artistic socialism that spread the costs and risks of programming among a broad base of listeners. Audiences subscribed to a block of concerts throughout the season, choosing a night of the week that was convenient, or a series that generally appealed to their musical interests. . .The benefits of this system were myriad: advanced ticket sales stabilized orchestra budgets and made planning easier; the programming was diversified and refreshed, and the musicians were consistently challenged; and listeners formed communities, socializing with each other at intermission.”
While the subscription model is in vogue for music streaming services like Pandora and Spotify (which has a truly Byzantine system of artist reimbursement), it just doesn’t jive with current classical audiences, particularly the young.
As 20th century subscription supporters of the arts die out, the only hope for sustaining the symphony orchestra is to build a young, loyal and consistent audience.
Social media could make it happen.
The Uses and Gratifications Theory says that people use and choose media in a variety of ways for a variety of reasons. The job of any organization looking to reach their target audience is to figure out how that audience likes their media. Are they snail mail junkies? Instagram photographers? Digital immigrants who are still figuring out Facebook?
Public relations and development specialists ask these questions every day. Orchestras would do well to follow their lead.
Let’s take an example from Syracuse.
Symphoria is almost 2 years old. In order to avoid a double feature of the 2011 fiasco, they need to harness every tool in their arsenal. A starting goal would be to increase regular attendance among millennials. This is where social media comes in, and these are the two steps I would take.
Get on the Twitter Horse
Symphoria is on Twitter, but they’ve got one foot in the stirrups and the other on the ground. As of today (Oct. 17), they’ve posted only one original tweet and two retweets since Oct. 9. That’s okay for a Luddite dabbler who occasionally shares a cosmic cat photo or a trendy #FeelTheBern.
It’s not so great when you have a product to sell and salaries to pay. (Also, sharing the genius-written, shake-up-your-soul music that will die away if people don’t start buying tickets. That’s important, too.)
Symphoria needs a designated social media monitor, someone to regularly create new content, interact with followers and consistently—as well as correctly—utilize hashtags, memes, trending topics and other such interweb features.
They can take their cues from Classic FM, whose Twitter presence is active, to say the least. In the last 16 hours, they’ve shared 11 original tweets and three retweets, with information about programs, audience-oriented articles and the musician-humor that rarely comes through to general audiences.
You're looking very dashing today, Ludwig… pic.twitter.com/GccK4PZBKV
— Classic FM (@ClassicFM) October 17, 2015
On Nov. 1, the great Itzhak Perlman is playing with Symphoria. This is a big deal. Why is there only one tweet about him? Also, why are they not promoting their Perlman Pumpkin photo contest? Come on, guys—that’d make a great hashtag.
Want to see Itzhak Perlman and stay in Armory Square? @VisitSyracuse + @TheJCHotel can help! http://t.co/TqAYQiBxRJ pic.twitter.com/F38tK277vZ
— Symphoria (@SymphoriaCNY) October 9, 2015
Board the Periscope Train
Apparently I’m riding the transportation-metaphor bus today. Can anyone say meta-metaphor? (Insert rimshot.)
Live-streaming is it right now. We want to experience things together at the same time across the world or down the street. We want a sneak peek into a moment. Arts organizations, including Symphoria, would do well to embrace the reality that millennial audiences want to be behind-the-scenes.
Seattle Opera is doing a fantastic job with this. For the last several years, using grant money from the Wallace Foundation, the opera company has strategically and intentionally tested new forms of audience building, including social media. Their original content is killer. Take a look at this backstage peek into the costume design of their current production of Georges Bizet’s The Pearl Fishers.
That’s not Periscope, but it’s the essence of what viewers are looking for.
With periscope, a Symphoria social media manager could live-stream rehearsal segments, conversations or Q&A with orchestra members and special guests or mini live-tours of the Crouse-Hinds Theatre.
Classical music orgs aren’t used to sharing the inner workings of their practice, but if they want to connect with the audience that will pay their bills (and possibly change the world after being inspired by Mahler’s Symphony No. 2), they’ll have to get over that. Wouldn’t it be fun for the young, classical music audience in Syracuse to see a 30-second Periscope conversation with Itzhak? I think so.
Symphoria can do this. Other arts organizations have shown that. Now it’s up to them to execute. #PerlmanPumpkin
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