Thursday, November 12, 2009

Hidden Baroque Music in Poprad


Last week, an international early music project called Central European Music Academy took place in the Slovak city of Poprad, just under the majestic High Tatras mountains. Slovakia's most prominent early music ensemble Musica Aeterna from Bratislava was present. Even some of my acquaintances from abroad would attend. Good news one would say. 

Except from the fact that such a 'prestigious' event had no medial coverage in Slovakia whatsoever. Despite my close connection to early music in general, I was personally shocked to find out of this festival through foreign sources - I reckon, that it was just a slight error for me not being informed of this beforehand. Newspapers wrote a brief article during the festival - where one would expect to publicise in advance in order to attract attention and to point out dynamic activities in the field of early music. But not so. One news item on public television, focussed on the presence of the dance department of Prague's National Theatre, who were performing original baroque choreography to the music of Jean Baptiste Lully. Not one mention of their own Slovak participants. Why?!

What gnaws on my mind is; are Slovaks so embarrassed about themselves, that they purposely eliminate all traces of themselves from such worthwhile activities, such that only foreign prominence gets the sole attention? I have witnessed many early music projects go to waste, because insufficient public interest and most of all lacking interest at the Ministry of Culture level, where they should be eager to support such trends.

The artistic music director of Musica Aeterna, Peter Zajíček was quoted in the said SME newspaper article that baroque music in the West doesn't sound other than in the Historically Informed Performance practice - and implying, that Slovakia seems not to realise this given, continuing to play a 1960s-ish Karajanesque rendition of baroque music as is the case with e.g. Warchal Chamber Orchestra. I totally agree with that statement - but I have to add something to complete the picture; this state is partly also caused by the lack of a structured and professional marketing approach. It is highly underestimated.


Continuing like this, may result in Musica Aeterna to bleed to death within a few years. The foundation of this music quality of Musica Aeterna, which had a profoundly genuine and pure approach to early music thanks to the late Ján Albrecht, will find itself in a dead-end alley. A quality gone to waste. Such that hidden attic performances will be the last sighs of breath. And despite that Poprad's 'music academy' was an interesting highlight, to me it looks like a missed train.


MS

Sunday, November 1, 2009

Slovak culture and Web 2.0

While Slovakia has experienced during the decades of totalitarianism political limitations to free information until 1989, for 20 years now it has entered formally the free "western" world, where information is accessible, especially since the introduction of internet and the like. Our world has gradually changed - we became more dynamic, more global, and more technological. IT-technological that is: Our borders have somewhat vanished, and we can nowadays access instantaneously electronic data whether from Anchorage or Auckland.


This would, in theory, give us a grand virtual mobility, where the geographic distances are irrelevant. On the one hand, as we became more computer literate (let's admit it - how many people were 25 years ago knowledgeable about RAM, kbps, IP, UTLs and you name it) we have a rich scala of comparison at our fingertips; in the event I recall a certain title by e.g. Jane Austen, I can google the book and eventually legally download it, or read some background info on it. All within a few minutes. In the old days, I could visit the nearest library, and if the book was taken, I had to wait another couple of weeks perhaps.


Technology has definitively also influenced our connection to arts. Not just Picasso's works can be viewed, music of all sorts is available from our sofas. While in the old days, we savoured unique life concerts, records brought - be it with some quality limitation - music into our homes. Nowadays, we can hear performances from Sydney, Los Angeles, Seoul, or Covent Garden, and compare them with the Concertgebouw, Berliner Philharmoniker, La Scala or the Gewandthaus. But now in full hi-fi quality, digitally remastered. A former manager of a Dutch symphony orchestra once described it as our "Ear-Phone Experience": When being at a live-concert, it is no longer the experience of hearing beautiful music to pleasantly spend the evening, but it has become a "comparing notes" with the other dozens of prominent performers.



Departing from this, technology moved us a bit forward also in a different field; now that we have become more informed, we have also must have added to our critical preferences - or at least we should. While all over the world the era of the so-called Web 2.0 is not a mere phenomenon of just globalising business vis a vis your home, strengthening networking; even arts has now strongly boarded this vehicle for their marketing purposes. While major orchestras even appear on Facebook or Twitter (to name a few), actively informing about there upcoming concerts, even providing possibilities of viewing online or downloading their concert, there is an odd silence in Slovakia. 


Although urging colleagues and other institutions to utilise these available tools, the vast majority has no connection to them. The effect of internet (or Web 2.0) is highly underestimated. There is hardly any connection felt for the possible synergy. The role of a marketing manager is grossly downgraded, as the willingness to invest in this field is close to zero. Slovakia has - sad to say - hardly understood how to deal with quality and how to sell it. Political structures hold a stiffling grip on culture, which is obvious on how institutions are run and when the chief editor of the only classical music magazine, is very selective in his criticism towards key figures in Slovak's culture, giving it a slight flavour of party propaganda. Well, perhaps his job is at stake.


While I sadly see how fast forward moving culture has connected all over the world, where colleagues in my direct neighbourhood like Christian Henner-Fehr, David Röthler, Karin Janner and many more, are successfully channeling art through the Web 2.0, I see Slovakia like a time-capsule, still experimenting as if still in the 1950s. Where music trends are generally speaking outdated, and where innovation is rather smothered than encouraged. Web 2.0 is a great tool, but for Slovakia it is still an unknown field, where the only problem is the Slovak mentality, unfortunately. The prospects are not very optimistic I am afraid.



MS