The news stories reporting Gil-bert’s appointment all made
conspicuous mention of the fact that he is forty years old. The New York
Philharmonic, far from coincidentally, has the oldest-looking audience
of any major arts organization whose performances I have attended in
recent years. Other orchestras are grappling with the same problem, and
one of them, the Los Angeles Philharmonic, has responded by taking the
even more drastic step of hiring as its next music director a conductor
considerably younger than Gilbert, the twenty-six-year-old Gustavo
Dudamel. But it is unlikely that the youthfulness of Dudamel and Gilbert
will be sufficient in and of itself to persuade anyone under thirty to
come to their concerts. The generation gap in classical music goes far
deeper than that.
A half-century ago, the New York Philharmonic
hired another forty-year-old music director who promptly put the
orchestra at the center of postwar American culture. But Leonard
Bernstein was already famous when he succeeded Dimitri Mitropoulos. By
1958, he had scored four Broadway musicals and a Hollywood movie, made
the most highly publicized conducting debut in the history of American
classical music, made dozens of major-label recordings, and spent
countless hours talking about music on network TV.
Alan Gilbert,
by contrast, has done none of those things, nor will he have the
opportunity to do anything like them. The fault lies not in his
abilities, such as they are, but in the fact that the days of the
celebrity conductor are over. Even if he proves to be a conductor
comparable in quality to Bernstein, there is no possibility whatsoever
that he will become as famous as Bernstein.
Why is this so?
Because our predominantly popular culture has withdrawn its attention
from classical music. The means by which a classical musician could once
become famous thus no longer exist. Major labels no longer record this
music except sporadically, just as the national media no longer cover it
with any frequency.
No less alarming is a parallel musical
development described by Dana Gioia, the chairman of the National
Endowment for the Arts, in a widely noted commencement address delivered
at Stanford University earlier this year:
At fifty-six, I am just
old enough to remember a time when every public high school in this
country had a music program with choir and band, usually a jazz band,
too, sometimes even an orchestra. . . . This once-visionary and
democratic system has been almost entirely dismantled by well-meaning
but myopic school boards, county commissioners, and state officials,
with the federal government largely indifferent to the issue. Art became
an expendable luxury, and 50 million students have paid the price.
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