It's the question few orchestras today want to answer.
How’s your
attendance?
The Cincinnati
Symphony Orchestra makes figures available once a year and the results for
2006-07 were disappointing.
A new marketing
director, Sherri Prentiss, joined the staff in October.
Last season may
have been a normal fluctuation, since CSO attendance figures were up in 2005-06,
but to try to gain a wider perspective I contacted 17 of the CSO’s peer
ensembles.
(The Cincinnati Pops fared better in 06-07, with attendance averaging 2,386 for its 22 Music Hall concerts, 8 percent over 05-06, while subscriptions and single tickets inched up .2 percent. Conversely, Pops figures declined in 05-06.)
Seven orchestras
responded,
Six did not reply,
ASOL president
Henry Fogel did state that ‘this (attendance) is a highly complex issue about
which there is insufficient data available for anyone to draw any real
conclusions. Any conversation would be
in the nature of speculation and I prefer not to speculate on subjects of this
importance.”
Figures obtained from
my ultimately modest sample of orchestras suggest little cause for alarm.
For pops concerts, it
was 1,525 for
It is generally
recognized that attendance at symphony concerts nationwide is either flat or
declining. The elephant in the room is
too much product, but with union contracts in place for up to 52 weeks a year,
it is difficult to reconcile supply and demand.
Exacerbating the situation are changing lifestyles and competing options
for people’s increasingly scarce leisure time.
The CSO has not
provided house counts for years, a justifiable practice, since 3,516-seat Music
Hall (which has splendid acoustics) is not only the largest concert hall in the
There are many
variables affecting symphony orchestra attendance. In addition to numbers of concerts, they
include:
[] performance hall
(condition, location, acoustics)
[] population
served by the orchestra
[] ticket prices
[] leadership on
the podium
[] effective
community outreach
Music Hall is the
“hot subject” for the CSO right now, said music director Paavo Järvi. At a recent pre-concert “Classical
Conversation” at Music Hall, Järvi commented on plans to reconfigure the hall.
(Music Hall was bought by the City of Cincinnati in 1941 after the Music Hall
Association, now the Cincinnati Arts Association, went bankrupt.)
“Our hall is very
large and almost never full, but rumors of me wanting to blow it up and build
another one are not true. I have always
loved the majesty of the hall. I compare
Cleveland and Chicago when I guest conduct and always think ‘how wonderful this
new, old hall is.’ They have new
backstage facilities, restrooms, food service.
They are technologically up to date.”
They are also
smaller. Severance Hall in
Plans to renovate Music
Hall are progressing, he said. “There have been some interesting developments. We are at a stage where a lot of options are
being studied.”
Parking is already
being addressed. With the demolition of
With a population
of 2.1 million,
Ticket prices,
which range from $12-$79.25 for CSO classical concerts, are another “inflated”
issue. Prices at the seven responding
orchestras were in line with or more than the CSO. The lowest price was in
No American
orchestra meets its expenses through ticket sales, but the CSO’s percent of
revenue from earned income -- “in the high 60s,” said finance director Don
Auberger -- is the highest of the nation’s major orchestras. Most orchestras “are happy at 45 percent,”
said development director Kenneth Goode.
Contributing
heavily to that is Riverbend, owned and operated by the CSO. “We are one of the few orchestras that have a
Riverbend-like facility,” said Goode.
“And we’re adding a new pavilion to Riverbend as of next year” (National
City Bank Pavilion, which will seat 4,000).
An orchestra’s
music director remains key to its success.
Seven of the 17 orchestras approached have new or incoming music
directors, a factor which invariably causes a spike in attendance. CSO music director since 2001, Järvi, 44,
extended his contract through the 2010-11 season last spring, with an
“evergreen” clause for automatic renewals.
The Estonian born conductor delivers for the CSO. Music Hall has been completely sold out twice
during his tenure and his concerts are always the season’s top sellers.
Järvi led his first
CSO community concert in October, a fund-raiser at
Community support
is what sustains the CSO, Goode said. “This
orchestra is 113 years old and has a base of support that many orchestras can
only begin to dream about. It’s part of
the fabric of this community. We had an
endowment before most orchestras were even created.”
In its quiet phase
now is a capital campaign to help rebuild that endowment, which lost about
one-third of its value during the stock market tumble in 2001-02 before
recovering to $78 million today (the CSO budget for 07-08 is approaching $33
million). “They have made a very
significant start and we will at some point make it public.” Goode said. “The timing is part of a plan we’ve developed
to give us the greatest chance of success.”
The CSO draws 6 percent a year from its endowment.
Although final
figures are not in because of late season shows at Riverbend, the CSO expects
to break even for the 2007 fiscal year, said Auberger. The orchestra carries a slight deficit
($100,000) left over from the building of Riverbend, which goes down every
year, he said.
In the end, every
orchestra must “find its own way,” Goode said.
“We have to come up with solutions that work for
Said Cincinnati
native Susan Plageman, vice president of external affairs for the Nashville
Symphony, the industry’s “Cinderella” with a new 1,844-seat hall, incoming
music director (Giancarlo Guerrero, 38), recording contract (Naxos), four
Grammy nominations, $104.4 million endowment, newly ratified five-year contract
with its musicians and subscription sales up 250 percent last season -- all
after emerging from bankruptcy in 1995:
“The Cincinnati
Symphony has been around a long, long time and has some real distinctions.”
Meyerhoff Symphony Hall (
Symphony Hall (
Orchestra Hall (
Music Hall,
Severance Hall (
Orchestra Hall (
Jones Hall (
Walt Disney Hall (
Orchestra Hall,
Laura Turner Concert Hall (
Avery Fisher Hall (
Verizon Hall (
Heinz Hall (
Eastman Theater (
Powell Hall (
Davies Hall (
Musikverein,
Suntory Hall,
Concertgebouw,
By Mary Ellyn Hutton
First published in The Cincinnati Post Nov. 23, 2007