Tag Archive for 'cleveland orchestra'

Columbus Symphony like Indianapolis

(Note Tony Beadle’s comparison of the Columbus Symphony to the Indianapolis Symphony as a model to achieve. Indianapolis has a robust budget and very fair musician salaries. I believe Tony and Columbus musicians are now on the same page. Thank you Tony. Let’s hope any future negotiations continue with this kind of thinking.)

Contract clash puts fate of Ohio symphony in doubt
7/26/2008, 1:12 p.m. ET
By JULIE CARR SMYTH
The Associated Press

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Sentiment these days surrounding the 57-year-old Columbus Symphony Orchestra is not so much Beethoven’s “Pastoral” as the “1812 Overture.”

The orchestra’s board of trustees suspended operations on June 1 and canceled the popular summer pops series and at least 10 fall classical concert performances, citing a projected $3 million budget shortfall. Managers and musicians have clashed over the next union contract and what direction to take the organization in the future.

If there is a future.

“It’s sort of like we’ve been at the brink,” said executive director Tony Beadle. “And now we have to go together hand in hand and illuminate what an orchestra does and what it means to a community at large.”

Fellow musicians have weighed in with their view.

“One of the great American cultural accomplishments of the 20th century was to bring access to top-quality performing arts to cities across the country,” the musicians of the Cincinnati Symphony and world-renowned Cleveland Orchestra wrote in a letter of support for Columbus players. “The loss of the Columbus Symphony Orchestra would represent a setback for the 21st century.”

A recent study by the Columbus Cultural Leadership Consortium found that arts and culture in greater Columbus is a powerful economic engine, generating $22 for every dollar spent in central Ohio compared with the $7 national average.

The analysis estimated that $330 million is spent each year in the region by nonprofit arts and cultural organizations and their audiences, with the Columbus Symphony being in the top tier of the city’s cultural food chain.

“Many people look to the arts as an indicator of the quality of life in this community. This does not help that mission,” Beadle said.

“But, over and above that, is that the Columbus Symphony as a musical ensemble is fantastic. It’s just one of those lucky circumstances that all the right components were put together on stage to produce fantastic music.”

Musicians credit better salaries with attracting the quality players that have built the orchestra’s critical acclaim over the years. The lowest paid Columbus Symphony musician makes $55,200 a year, compared with $75,400 for the Indianapolis Symphony, $91,900 for the Cincinnati Symphony, $101,452 for the Pittsburgh Symphony and $110,760 for Cleveland, according to data from the American Federation of Musicians.

“I think it’s taken decades to build the Columbus Symphony into the high-quality organization it is,” said Douglas Fisher, president of the Central Ohio Federation of Musicians, which represents 53 symphony musicians. “Forcing us to accept the Draconian cuts proposed by the board basically would destroy everything we’ve built.”

Board president Robert Trafford has said reaching a new agreement with the musicians’ union is the only way to rescue the symphony.

The board’s initial proposal sought to reduce the symphony’s annual expense budget from $12 million to $9.5 million, or 12.5 percent, and the number of full-time orchestra musicians from 53 to 31. Paid weeks per year would fall from 46 to 34, cutting the playing season by a quarter.

“The orchestra has had a history of a structural deficit, which means, all other things being equal and without outside gifts, you’re outspending what you’re taking in,” said Beadle, who spent seven years managing the Boston Pops.

Beadle said Columbus musicians need to look to peer orchestras — such as Indianapolis — when determining whether their salaries are fair, not to the likes of the Cleveland Orchestra, one of the “Big Five” orchestras in America.

“I maintain everybody here would like to pay them as much as we possibly can, because we honor the profession and honor what they do, but start benchmarking yourself to your collegial orchestras,” he said.

Fisher said the orchestra’s structural deficit cannot be blamed on how much musicians are paid. After musicians agreed to an 11 percent pay cut in 2005, the Columbus Symphony’s budget for artistic expenses has remained on or under budget every year, according to a financial analysis commissioned by the union. Last year, ticket sales were up 24 percent.

“We agreed to $1.3 million in cuts in exchange for the promise of a new director, a new executive director and other changes,” he said. “They didn’t do the things they promised. It’s really a problem of governance, and that will continue until the right people are given the keys to the organization.”

Last year, the symphony joined with other area arts organizations — including Columbus’ ballet, opera, art museums and adult and children’s theater companies — in a joint fundraising effort aimed largely at making the best use of big donors’ dollars in a shared funding arrangement.

But the effort may have come too late for the symphony. Without a contract by Aug. 31, the 2008-2009 season will be canceled and, Fisher fears, reviving the orchestra could be impossible.

In hopes of retaining community interest and keeping musicians from relocating for other jobs, symphony musicians have put together self-funded summer concerts under the name Musicians of the Columbus Symphony.

Beadle is optimistic a compromise will be struck.

“We need to find it within ourselves to find the commonality of wanting to have a symphony orchestra, provide a lively community for musicians and serve the city of Columbus,” he said.

Letter to Columbus from Jon Kimura Parker

Jon Kimura ParkerIn the past two seasons, Jon Kimura Parker has performed as guest soloist with the New York Philharmonic, The Cleveland Orchestra, The Philadelphia Orchestra, the Baltimore Symphony, the Columbus Symphony, the Dallas Symphony, the Florida Orchestra, the Houston Symphony, the Minnesota Orchestra, and every major orchestra in Canada. This season Mr. Parker performs with major orchestras in Atlanta, Boston, Calgary, Cincinnati, Denver, Ottawa, Salt Lake City, San Diego, Tampa, Tokyo, Toronto, Rochester, and Warsaw. He also returns to the Hollywood Bowl with the Los Angeles Philharmonic next summer.

I made my debut with the Columbus Symphony Orchestra in the early 90s and was frankly astounded at the quality of the orchestra then.

I have been fortunate to see and hear its artistic growth over a
fifteen year period. I have collaborated with the CSO in repertoire ranging from Mozart to Tchaikovsky, and I have performed with many individual players in this extraordinary orchestra in chamber music festivals nationwide. I also recount, from many years ago, the great experience I had with the Rachmaninoff 3rd Piano Concerto, with Maestro Junichi Hirokami.

The quality, commitment, and artistic vision of this orchestra and its music director are recognized nationally and internationally. The CSO’s reputation has made Columbus a cultural jewel. The best players from around the country have moved to Columbus to make music for your citizens, to move you, to entertain you, and to enrich your lives. They are teaching music to your children.

It takes many years, even decades, for an orchestra to achieve this kind of prominence and renown. Unfairly perhaps, reversing this level of quality is painfully fast. Dire uncertainty or drastic curtailing of the scope of any orchestra quickly results in the best players moving on.

It is urgent to support this orchestra now and to demonstrate that the city of Columbus recognizes its value.

The artistic world is watching Columbus carefully and hoping to see this commitment to excellence continue.

It is overwhelmingly encouraging to note that the next few concerts have been saved, but it is now critical to support the CSO’s future.

Finally, I want to express my willingness to come to Columbus to perform without fee in any concert that will support the CSO and actively encourage others to do so. I can only imagine that many of my colleagues would do the same.

Respectfully,
Jon Kimura Parker
Concert Pianist