Thad E Ginathom
Well-Known Member
Classic Act (The Hindu)
I'm cross. I wrote to [email protected] ....
The BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra is all set to enthral the Chennai audience with a spectacular performance of classical music, its first ever in the city, on March 29. Divya Kumar has the details
Its one of the biggest ever undertakings by a British orchestra in India. The celebrated BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra (BBC SSO) will embark on a three-city tour of India, beginning with its first ever performance in Chennai on March 29.
The performance will be held at the Sir Mutha Venkatasubba Rao Concert Hall at 7 p.m. on March 29. The mandatory dress code is black tie/ Indian formals.
I'm cross. I wrote to [email protected] ....
The BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra should be welcomed to Chennai, and all music lovers should be welcome to the concert. But they are not: "The Mandatory dress code is black tie / Indian formals."
The very idea of a dress code to appreciate and enjoy music is absolutely ridiculous.
Is this a concert or a fancy-dress event? One of the things that Western classical music has had to struggle with is its off-putting aura of elitism: that classical music is not for all, it is for those, for instance, who can afford and choose to buy and wear evening dress.
I have been to Covent Garden wearing jeans, and, although it is true that I more self-concious person might have felt out of place, at least nobody tried to tell me that I could not enjoy Wagner on account of my clothes.
Ask for concert decorum by all means. Tell people they will not be allowed in after the start, and that they should be seated and quiet during the performance. Carnatic music here would benefit from a dose of Western concert decorum. But by insisting on dress that a limited sector of the public will even own, or not allowing people who need to come straight from the office, many true or possible music lovers are left rejected. This is a travesty of art.
Unless the aim is to conduct a fancy-dress event for the wealthy, rather than to bring rare classical music to Chennai, this foolishness should be reconsidered . It is a foolishness that you would not find, for instance, at London's Royal Festival Hall.
I am personally very disappointed to be excluded, but the principle of making the music available to all is far more important than the effect on just one person. This absurd restriction should make all art lovers, even those who do own and wear evening dress, very angry.