Philadelphia Magazine

Band on the Run

New players. New hall. New problems. Old audience. And as the Philadelphia Orchestra reaches for solutions, will it lose all that’s made it great?

By Andrew Corsello

Page 1 of 10

ON THE 7TH of this month, go down to Dave and Buster's, Philadelphia's adult romper room on the Delaware, and you'll see a private party with the same kind of people you see there every night. It'll be a neatly, but not formally, dressed crowd of 20somethings out of school just long enough to have lost the saucer-eyed, eager-to-please look. They'll be shooting pool, ogling the help, monkeying with the virtual-reality games.

Take a guess: a bunch of Sigma Chi thicknecks and their dates replaying worn rituals? A posse of entry-level CIGNA clerks readying themselves for a night of no-holds-barred karaoke? No, neither. Believe it or not, the kids who will make up this crowd are cultural guardians (some say paramedics), called upon to preserve their city's most wondrous treasure, the Philadelphia Orchestra. They may not yet understand their calling; they just want to party.

The orchestra's marketing experts, unfazed by the foggy weight of tradition, granite-faced dignity and myth that envelops their 95-year-old client, have boldly decided that Dave and Buster's — rather than talk of "high art" — is the key to the hearts and minds of young Philadelphians. "We need to reach out any way we can," says the orchestra's president, Joe Kluger, who helps mastermind such efforts to lower the median age of the organization's subscribers — now between 55 and 60 and increasingly suburban. "And we need to approach the people who will make up the orchestra's future lifeblood on their own terms." Depending on how you look at it, such a strategy can be seen as desperate, clever or both.

This month's party will be the first of several (others will be at the White Dog Cafe and some players to be named) thrown in conjunction with orchestra concerts. It's part of a package aimed at Philly's youth, which the marketing mavens have appropriately dubbed ClassiX Live — a nod, perhaps, to Douglas Coupland's meaningless moniker "Generation X."

The $25 deal aims to achieve the most difficult of tasks — that of convincing people on the brink of adulthood that they want to take on their parents' habits. Like the New York Philharmonic's informal rush-hour concerts, the four X events — two fewer than in any previous orchestra package — don't demand much of a commitment. (Drifting, disaffected Xers hate the C-word.)

The juxtaposition of Dave and Buster's and the Philadelphia Orchestra may seem a bit odd. It may also be fully self-aware. In recent years, classical music has come to be seen as hoary, re-creative art with a repertoire reflecting a "museum mentality," warns Time critic Michael Walsh — a mentality that, by deifying performers and ignoring composers, offers nothing new. Or, as Allan Bloom wrote in The Closing of the American Mind: "Classical music is now a special taste, like Greek language or pre-Columbian archaeology, not a common culture of reciprocal communication and psychological shorthand" — like, say, grunge rock or rap.


 

Page | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | Next


Change text size
Print

Email

Write a comment
 
 

User comments

No users have posted comments on this article.

Post a comment

(* = required field.)
  • Please check to make sure that your referer is not blocked.


Subject line of your comment*
Your comments (200 words max)*
Email*
First name*
Last Name*
Enter the code shown below.
Visual CAPTCHA
This helps prevent automated form submissions.
Philadelphia It List

Lets Do Cocktails: Recipes

Take a sneak peak into the latest, mouth-watering cocktails that will be featured in Philadelphia's area restaurants this season.
 
 

Philadelphia Magazine Daily

Follow Philadelphia Magazine tweets on twitter.com/phillymag
 
 

Whiskey Festival 2009

Join us at the 2009 Whiskey Festival - a tasting event featuring premium whiskeys and spirits from around the world. November 12. 6:30pm. Union League of Philadelphia. $85. Buy Tickets Now.
 
 

Design Home 2009

Philadelphia magazine's Eighth Annual Design Home. Follow our progress and explore the details as they come to life in two magnificent carriage homes at Haverford Reserve. Tours start September 10th.
 
 

6th Annual Trailblazer Award

Do you know an accomplished business woman? Submit your nomination today for Philadelphia magazine's 6th Annual Trailblazer Award! Deadline is November 6.