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Edited on Sat Dec-06-08 06:56 PM by mycritters2
Yes, I love symphonic music, but hate symphony concerts. I've been invited to one tonight by my piano teacher/church organist. She'll be playing, so it's not a matter of my sitting with her. Indeed, it's possible she wouldn't know whether I go or not.
But I hate these concerts, especially in this town. First, it's not like it's the Chicago Symphony or anything. It's all local amateurs, though I know they practice hard, and are not a bad little orchestra. It's not the orchestra that's the problem. It's the pretentiousness.
First, every woman in town who owns a fur coat will feel obligated to wear it. I get creeped out being surrounded by dead animal carcasses. This is no more attractive or impressive to me than listening to music in a meat locker. I'd like to go listen to music in clothes in which I feel comfortable, not in clothes worn to impress others. Indeed, anyone who notices what I wear at a concert is a total asshole. But the ladies will dress to impress.
Then, and yes, this irks me about every symphony concert, there are the "you don't clap there" Nazis. Invariably some poor schlub won't know the mighty secrets of orchestra concerts. Symphonic music is divided into "movements", pieces of music carrying some of the theme of the full symphony but a body of music in its own right as well. All well-educated and appropriately pretentious people know that you don't applaud at the end of a movement..only at the end of the full work. Normal people, on the other hand, are impressed with well-performed music and want to express their appreciation by applause. At what appears to normal people ears to be the end of a piece. So, some poor soul will do just that...applaud at what seems (yes, even to me) to be the right place. Then, all the right-thinking people will look disparagingly, and I've even seen people correct these good people, at the person who had the gall to let the orchestra know that he or she appreciated their hard work.
And then there are the not-so-unwritten rules about coughing, sneezing, or *gasp* rummaging around in your purse for a lozenge to prevent you from *gasp* coughing or sneezing. For 2 hours, give or take, one is NOT to demonstrate any of the traits of a normal human being in a normal human body in cold and flu season in Northern Illinois. And if you SHOULD give into that tickle or the congestion in your head or chest, the glaring-at-you because-they-now-know-what-a-barbarian-you-really-are Nazis will glare at you because they now know what a barbarian you really are. Barbarian :eyes: Since I'm still recovering from pneumonia, and actually under orders to "cough that stuff up", this is the main reason I don't dare go tonight.
You like the music? You enjoy the rhythm? You really think it deserves toe-tapping or moving your head or hands in time to the music? How gauche! Your job for these 2 hours (or more!) is to sit there, not moving a single muscle. You are not to LOOK like you're enjoying it. You are to stare studiously at the musicians, letting everyone around you know that you appreciate the music. This is about "music appreciation", not "liking music", which is gauche. The more pained the expression on your face, the better.
This will also be a special evening because of the dearth of people of color in attendance. In this, the most race-divided town in which I've ever lived since Boston, this is the height of special white people time. There will be no people of color in the orchestra, nor in the audience. Apparently, Mozart and Schubert wanted it that way. And so, those in attendance will basque in the very whiteness of the evening.
I once told one of the musicians in my church that I like Andre' Rieu, because he invites people to dance in the aisles when he plays a waltz, he encourages the audience to tap their toes, sway in time, etc. His orchestra even wears colors other than black. What fun! Her response: "He's not a musician, he's a showman." Me: "But he fills venues the CSO could never half fill." Her: "But with what kind of an audience?" And that says it all.
Symphony concerts like the one I've been invited to are about something other than the music. I'll stay home and listen to cds tonight. And cough.
Thank you for letting me vent. :rant:
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