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The Philadelphia Orchestra connects at Penn's Landing

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The Philadelphia Orchestra connects at Penn's Landing

POSTED: Sunday, July 29, 2012, 9:38 AM
A member of the audience waves the flag as the Philadelphia Orchestra opens its neighborhood concert with the Nathional Anthem on Friday, July 27, 2012 at Penn's Landing. ( RON CORTES / Staff Photographer ).

How can orchestras today defy the odds and attract large, newly engaged audiences - young ones, willing to put down iPad and Hulu and instant gratification for the night? Diverse ones, who somehow missed the ruse that classical music isn’t for them?

It turns out the best strategy might be to simply play. Where you play has a lot to do with it, and Friday night, it was Penn’s Landing, where the Philadelphia Orchestra’s second (and, sadly, last) free neighborhood concert of the summer attracted a crowd that would have raised marketing envy in anyone feeling weight-upon-shoulders for the future of the art form.

Timing was everything. With storms threatening Thursday evening, only about 1,500 came out for the orchestra’s first concert at the Curtis Arboretum in Wyncote, and everyone wisely scattered after the Star Spangled Banner and first piece when the rain and lightning rolled in.

Friday night, the riverside was populated with an estimated 3,500 to 5,000 visitors. How many were lured to the concert more by the promise of fireworks than Fauré’s Pavane is something no one would be able to sort out, but the music’s spell stopped everyone in their tracks. Or not. A girl, perhaps six, swayed her dreads to Dvoƙák’s Carnival Overture. Wagner’s “The Ride of the Valkyries” suggested new choreographic possibilities when joined by a large woman gliding conspicuously near the stage on an electric wheelchair. The “Bacchanale” from Saint-Saëns’ Samson and Delilah dueled with a passing Jet Ski.

If all this action sounds distracting, it wasn’t. Not entirely. Other outdoor venues might have matched the twinkling harp in Tchaikovsky’s Romeo and Juliet Fantasy-Overture to real stars. But Penn’s Landing is about humanity. When, midway thorough the Tchaikovsky, a pair of lovers got up to leave the concert, you wondered whether they were simply done with it all, or induced to pick up the storyline themselves off-site.

The point is this: one hopes that the orchestra, which has had a rough several years, has the clarity to see that the seeds of a healthier future are already in place. These neighborhood concerts, revived in 2000, are, weather and funding challenges aside, a tremendous success. They do more to bond the orchestra’s image with the city than anything else it does. Ushers passed out season brochures to each visitor, and conductor Cristian Macelaru mentioned several times from the stage that anyone interested in hearing more could do so almost any night of the week at Verizon Hall.

Bait and switch is a risk. Most pieces on the slate for Friday night’s 75-minute concert are popular enough to have been heard in TV commercials of the past several decades. The “Nocturne” from Mendelssohn’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream – with Jeffrey Lang’s sweet, slightly brisk horn solo – was the evening’s most remote point from popular culture.

With the orchestra expecting to officially exit bankruptcy Monday and about to put flesh to a strategic plan, leaders will be weighing the delicate factors of repertoire, venue, and length and formats of concerts. Funding free performances is a challenge, to be sure. But when the orchestra travels locally, a powerful civic bonhomie blooms. Our city needs more of this. The neighborhood series has shrunk slightly in its dozen years. That’s a trend that the orchestra and its sponsors should be working to reverse if they are sincere about coming off the dais and down to street level where the love is theirs for the asking.

5 comments
Comments  (5)
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 12:05 PM, 07/29/2012
    The Orch should play there at least once a month in the summer and find similar venues that work. They need no parlay Verizon, the Academy and non-traditional venues as a part of the post-banruptcy vision (I found it very hard to type that!).
    ledoyen
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 2:48 PM, 07/29/2012
    Love the outdoor concerts!
    ptahan
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 5:25 PM, 07/29/2012
    To be fair about Thursday night, "only 1500" is outstanding considering the threat of an immediate storm was imminent for the entire afternoon, which may have discouraged many. For those who were there, the effort and the music were deeply appreciated.
    factcheck
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 10:09 AM, 07/30/2012
    I was there, it was great. This is what the Orchestra should be doing. I have attended a few of these. The music is more important than a column from the Orchestra. The bankruptcy was a bad idea as well as the ridiculous fees that were paid out.
    Paul Deon
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 9:41 AM, 08/02/2012
    So... the Orchestra should give more free outdoor concerts. Why? They have to raise money. Concerts are expensive to mount. They would be better off if they never played for free.
    If you want live music, you're going to have to pay the pipers. And the stagehands, librarians, managers, and even the conductors.
    No more free concerts!
    altekakker


About this blog

Peter Dobrin is a classical music critic and culture writer for The Inquirer. Since 1989, he has written music reviews, features, news and commentary for the paper, covering such topics as the Philadelphia Museum of Art at the Venice Biennale, expansion of the Curtis Institute of Music, the Philadelphia Orchestra's bankruptcy declaration in 2011, Philadelphia's evolving performing arts center and the general health of arts and culture.

Dobrin was a French horn player. He earned an undergraduate degree in performance from the University of Miami, and received a master's degree in music criticism from the Peabody Institute of the Johns Hopkins University, where he studied with Elliott Galkin. He has no time to practice today.

Reach Peter at pdobrin@phillynews.com.

Peter Dobrin Inquirer Classical Music Critic
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