Monthly Archive for August, 2008

A Spirit Reviving Party

The Friday before our last summer concert (Aug 3) I gave a party for the musicians and Junichi Hirokami at my home.

I took up a collection from the musicians who attended and we were able to have wonderful live music for the event, jazz pianist Erik Augis and acoustic bassist Andy Woodson. The rich colors of live jazz filled the house. Both Erik and Andy are sophisticated and talented musicians and deserved what we paid them.

Everyone brought food and drinks. There were about 30 musicians who were able to attend.

When Junichi arrived, we all gave him warm hugs. He was tired, since his flight from Japan had arrived 8 hours late, at 2:30 AM the night before.

Later in the evening we had a special surprise. Ed Thompson, the Grammy award-winning audio engineer who had recorded our live performance of Tchaikovsky’s 5th symphony and Romeo and Julliet Overture in March, had phoned me earlier in the day. He told me he had a copy of the final edit of the recording, which will be released by Denon sometime this Fall.

The performance of the Tchaikovsky symphony is the same one I referred to in my essay which was published in the Dispatch. In that essay I noted how optimistically I felt about the ending of the symphony, and perhaps how it might signal a happy ending to our difficult crisis in remaining a viable orchestra in Columbus.

We all gathered around to listen to ourselves playing the brilliant and emotional music. We couldn’t believe how good it sounded. For months we had been led to believe we were worth little as expert creators of amazing live music. Now we could hear for ourselves the world-class product we were able to produce. The chemistry between Junichi and the orchestra rendered the music into a unique and palpable voice, which communicated Tchaikovsky’s personal message into sonic emotion. Some of the musicians were moved to tears in a cathartic release of all the emotions and stress which has built up in the past 6 months.

Ed recounted how some of the engineers whom he had worked with in editing the recording had commented, with great emotion, how superior the performance was.

I still hope there will be a happy ending to the Symphony. But I fear that those in power in Columbus just don’t have the will to make it happen. I hope I’m wrong about that. Because I know that Columbus can do it.

Stanford Study of Orchestras

American Symphonies Often Spend
More Than They Earn

March 2008

STANFORD GRADUATE SCHOOL OF BUSINESS—Most major symphony orchestras in the United States regularly spend more money than they take in, and some dip so far into endowments that they risk their long-term survival, according to a new report commissioned by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation.

“The industry should realize that there is an inherent long-term economic challenge,” said Robert J. Flanagan, the Konosuke Matsushita Professor of International Labor Economics and Policy Analysis at the Stanford Graduate School of Business and the study’s author. “Nowadays, even if symphonies filled their halls for every concert, the vast majority would still not be able to cover their performance expenses.”

Although recessions exacerbate their woes, Flanagan said many symphonies have financial troubles even in good times. Attendance has been declining for most types of concerts, and orchestras may not be adequately scrutinizing the returns to their expenditures on marketing and fundraising, said Flanagan, an amateur musician since childhood who plays clarinet and saxophone. He said larger symphonies, for example, appear to spend nearly twice as much on fundraising as they realize through donations.

Some orchestra managers told Flanagan they disagreed with that conclusion, but other symphony officials he interviewed were hardly shocked.

“Some of them say it doesn’t surprise them because many symphonies have a bias towards revenue growth strategies and a bias against cost-cutting strategies,” Flanagan said, adding that nonprofit board members often shy away from conflict. “It’s not clear that they’re willing to be as tough minded about costs as directors in the private sector.”

Flanagan’s study includes data from every orchestra that ranked as one of the 50 largest U.S. symphonies for at least two years during the 1987-88 through 2003-04 concert seasons, a total of 63 orchestras. During that time 46 orchestras ran deficits on average—excluding their money from endowments—versus only 17 with surpluses.

In many U.S. industries, companies have been able to increase salaries gradually because technology has made workers more productive. Flanagan said symphonies have much slower productivity gains—technology isn’t about to turn a string quartet into a string duo—but musicians still expect bigger paychecks. The salaries of symphony musicians increased more rapidly than the pay of most other groups of workers in the late 20th century. Higher ticket prices did not fully compensate for cost increases, but those higher ticket prices reduced attendance at a typical performance.

Any stumbles in the economy only exacerbate the problem. A slumping economy reduces attendance as well as philanthropic support, but has little moderating effect on performance expenses.

Flanagan said the study’s scope did not try to identify similarities among the 17 symphonies that usually did have surpluses. Overall, he said, he noticed how widely all orchestras studied varied in terms of expenses, sources of income, and even how they invested their endowments. “With this much variance, it would seem there is an opportunity to discover what the best practices might be,” he observed.

One common thread he found is that the orchestras’ marketing expenses paid diminishing returns: “The last $100 you spend yields far less than the first $100 that you spend.” What the optimal threshold would be varies widely from orchestra to orchestra, but Flanagan said many could save money by scrutinizing marketing expenses.

Fundraising efforts are more complex. Professional fundraisers in many fields often say that they bring in 8- to 10-times as much money as they spend, but Flanagan is skeptical. “A lot of that money would have come in anyway.”

Flanagan said many people choose to support the local arts and hardly need a fundraising event to remind them. Based on population, unemployment, and economic data, he analyzed normal fundraising expectations in regions surrounding the orchestras. For the smaller half (based on budget size) of the orchestras he sampled, the investment was worth it: They received about $1.96 for each $1 they spent on fundraising. It was far different for the larger symphonies where each $1 spent returned only 51 cents.

Some say the fundraising efforts pay off in future years, but Flanagan did not find that during the study, which covered 17 years. “The question becomes: When are these expenditures going to pay off?”

Although Flanagan believes a best-practices effort would help many symphonies improve their financial status, he stressed that the financial circumstances vary greatly from city to city and orchestra to orchestra.

“You can’t go through this analysis and conclude that there’s a single solution—a single smoking gun,” he said. “I think the report documents the futility of single solutions.”

—Dave Murphy