Classical Music has a Diversity Problem
(2024) p.41-58- Abstract
- A recent profusion of statistics on classical music repertoire, performers, and education from across several countries have produced quantitative evidence confirming that it is primarily a musical tradition where white, middle class European cis-males succeed. This chapter examines how improving the inclusivity and equality of classical music conflicts with its beliefs in meritocracy and high musical quality, but argues that giving up on a belief in classical music’s universalism and exploring instead its many situated entanglements with the world around it would allow for a new approach that does not fall back on the exclusionary categories it has historically relied upon, while offering forms of engaging with classical music that better... (More)
- A recent profusion of statistics on classical music repertoire, performers, and education from across several countries have produced quantitative evidence confirming that it is primarily a musical tradition where white, middle class European cis-males succeed. This chapter examines how improving the inclusivity and equality of classical music conflicts with its beliefs in meritocracy and high musical quality, but argues that giving up on a belief in classical music’s universalism and exploring instead its many situated entanglements with the world around it would allow for a new approach that does not fall back on the exclusionary categories it has historically relied upon, while offering forms of engaging with classical music that better align with contemporary values of inclusivity and equality. I also argue that sustained statistical work is crucially important to continuing to address classical music’s exclusions, but that in order to not simply facilitate surface changes to a problematic system (engaging in what I call a reformist critique), their goal must be to confound existing categorisations and help usher in new perspectives on the classical music tradition (a radical critique), which in turn requires statistical categories to be readapted. While structural problems will not disappear overnight, such an approach will reveal how classical music has always already been entangled with its surroundings and been the site of many experiments and interactions with other musical genres, which it has marked as ‘other’ and has either forgotten, omitted or purposefully discarded. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/51492d7a-17a6-494c-820e-846f2849a2ae
- author
- Farnsworth, Brandon LU
- organization
- publishing date
- 2024
- type
- Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding
- publication status
- published
- subject
- host publication
- Classical Music Futures : Practices of Innovation - Practices of Innovation
- editor
- Smith, Neil T. ; Peters, Peter and Molina, Karoly
- pages
- 18 pages
- publisher
- Open Book Publishers
- external identifiers
-
- scopus:85188867518
- ISBN
- 978-1-80511-075-0
- 978-1-80511-079-8
- 978-1-80511-076-7
- 978-1-80511-073-6
- 978-1-80511-074-3
- DOI
- 10.11647/OBP.0353.02
- project
- Another Break with Tradition? Investigating Contemporary Music's Diversification through an Institutional Ethnography of the Borealis Festival in Bergen, Norway
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- yes
- id
- 51492d7a-17a6-494c-820e-846f2849a2ae
- date added to LUP
- 2023-01-27 13:58:02
- date last changed
- 2024-07-23 22:55:19
@inbook{51492d7a-17a6-494c-820e-846f2849a2ae, abstract = {{A recent profusion of statistics on classical music repertoire, performers, and education from across several countries have produced quantitative evidence confirming that it is primarily a musical tradition where white, middle class European cis-males succeed. This chapter examines how improving the inclusivity and equality of classical music conflicts with its beliefs in meritocracy and high musical quality, but argues that giving up on a belief in classical music’s universalism and exploring instead its many situated entanglements with the world around it would allow for a new approach that does not fall back on the exclusionary categories it has historically relied upon, while offering forms of engaging with classical music that better align with contemporary values of inclusivity and equality. I also argue that sustained statistical work is crucially important to continuing to address classical music’s exclusions, but that in order to not simply facilitate surface changes to a problematic system (engaging in what I call a reformist critique), their goal must be to confound existing categorisations and help usher in new perspectives on the classical music tradition (a radical critique), which in turn requires statistical categories to be readapted. While structural problems will not disappear overnight, such an approach will reveal how classical music has always already been entangled with its surroundings and been the site of many experiments and interactions with other musical genres, which it has marked as ‘other’ and has either forgotten, omitted or purposefully discarded.}}, author = {{Farnsworth, Brandon}}, booktitle = {{Classical Music Futures : Practices of Innovation}}, editor = {{Smith, Neil T. and Peters, Peter and Molina, Karoly}}, isbn = {{978-1-80511-075-0}}, language = {{eng}}, pages = {{41--58}}, publisher = {{Open Book Publishers}}, title = {{Classical Music has a Diversity Problem}}, url = {{https://lup.lub.lu.se/search/files/170110476/Chapter_2_-_Farnsworth_PREPRINT.pdf}}, doi = {{10.11647/OBP.0353.02}}, year = {{2024}}, }