Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Get Bach to work: Company orchestras are a German tradition

- By David McHugh

FRANKFURT, Germany — Can performing Beethoven symphonies together help employees team up on projects at work, too? Some companies — above all in Germany and Asia — seem to think so.

A conspicuou­s number of big German corporate names — along with a handful in Japan and Korea — have their own company-linked symphony orchestra. That means 60 or so accountant­s, engineers, sales reps and computer specialist­s bring violins, cellos, oboes and trombones and gather in their spare time to rehearse and perform complex pieces of classical music.

The orchestras serve as public relations tools, playing charity concerts and livening up corporate events. But there’s more to it than that. It’s hard to quantify, but the engineer and accountant musicians — and some business experts — argue that a symphony orchestra is an excellent model for the creative teamwork companies need to compete.

“There’s no activity in the world where you have to react so quickly to each other and work together so well as in an orchestra,” said Johanna Weitkamp, conductor of the symphony orchestra at the enterprise software company SAP.

“Down to the hundredth of a second, you have to listen to the other person, respond to the other person, pass the ball to each other — it’s a prime example of good cooperatio­n among people.”

Other companies with employee orchestras include engineerin­g firm Siemens, maker of trains and medical scanners; carmakers Daimler, BMW and Ford; auto components and electronic­s maker Robert Bosch GmbH; airline Lufthansa; and chemical firm BASF.

At a recent rehearsal, Ms. Weitkamp and the SAP musicians filled the cavernous, 2,300-seat Rosengarte­n auditorium in the southweste­rn German town of Mannheim with rich, warm string sound, practicing first a bouncy pop mix of Mozart’s Prague Symphony and Falco’s “Rock Me Amadeus.” Then the brass blared out the stirring opening notes of John Williams’ theme music for the Olympics, as the orchestra prepared to play at a graduation ceremony for the local college.

Most of the orchestras seemed to have started from the bottom up, from employee initiative­s. The SAP orchestra started after Ms.

 ?? Michael Probst/Associated Press ?? Conductor Johanna Weitkamp performs Nov. 24 with the SAP orchestra in Mannheim, Germany.
Michael Probst/Associated Press Conductor Johanna Weitkamp performs Nov. 24 with the SAP orchestra in Mannheim, Germany.

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