Arab Times

Met Opera aims to lure millennial­s

Young viewers interested in social experience­s

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NEW YORK, Oct 15, (AFP): The Metropolit­an Opera is digging deep into its bag of tricks as it attempts to lure in younger generation­s more familiar with “Mozart in the Jungle” than its long-dead inspiratio­n.

At a “Fridays Under 40” party earlier this month, young opera prospects, some donning tuxedos and gowns, took selfies with cast extras and mingled over soda and cheese in a space set below one of the Met’s signature Marc Chagall murals.

Others gathered on a terrace overseeing Lincoln Center as an anticipato­ry buzz built ahead of an opulentlys­taged performanc­e of “Samson et Dalila” moments later.

The parties, 10 in all throughout the season and offered at a discounted ticket price for a performanc­e, are part of the Met’s efforts to reposition itself as it rethinks its artistic vision under a new music director.

The initiative­s are meant to put the 135-year-old organizati­on on stronger financial footing by effectivel­y offsetting inevitable declines in the audience that remembers Pearl Harbor and the JFK shooting with one whose seminal experience­s were 9/11 and the financial crisis.

Ticket sales are stable, but well below the standards of opera’s golden era in the last century. In the 2017-8 season, the house sold 67 percent of seats out of total revenue capacity, the same as the prior season, according to Met data.

Moody’s in May downgraded the Met’s credit rating, writing that the opera group would “continue to attract audiences and donors,” but that “box office revenue will likely continue to soften in keeping with sector trends.”

Just ahead of the start of the 20189, the Met announced that it reached agreement with its orchestra and chorus unions to begin offering Sunday matinees next year, a potentiall­y significan­t boost given the popularity of the Saturday matinee.

In another key step, the Met also announced

percent increase in weekly salary over the three-year contract term. (AP)

LOS ANGELES:

Apple Inc has acquired music analytics start-up Asaii, Axios reported on Sunday, citing sources, in a bid to strengthen content recommenda­tions to its music users.

Apple’s deal to buy Asaii was worth less than $100 million, Axios reported, citing a source.

Asaii can help Apple compete with Spotify Technology SA’s efforts to work directly with smaller artists, like a music it would extend its season into June and take a mid-winter break in February, a weak period for ticket sales.

New music director Yannick NezetSegui­n signaled more change in a September interview with the New York Times, announcing plans for collaborat­ors with the Public Theater and the Brooklyn Academy of Music and plans for newer politicall­y-tinged works, such as an opera adaptation of “Dead Man Walking”.

“This is a very strong message that I want to send: about how opera is actually for everyone,” Nezet-Seguin told the newspaper. “It’s an illusion to think that everyone will love it. But it’s not an illusion to try to make everyone feel welcome to it.”

Nezet-Seguin is the replacemen­t for James Levine, whose exit was accelerate­d last year amid accusation­s of sexual abuse.

Mirrored

To an extent, the Met’s dilemma is mirrored at other leading opera houses such as Paris and Milan, which have also launched programs to draw in millennial­s. But the Met’s size of around 3,800 exceeds other major houses by more than 1,000 seats and poses particular challenges.

Another factor is that fewer schools in the US teach about music, notes Gillian Brierley, assistant general manager for marketing and communicat­ions at the Met.

“We have a lot of work to do to help people make that first step through the door because there’s less classical music knowledge in the younger generation­s that are coming through,” she told AFP.

Marketing around the performanc­es seems designed to disabuse notions that the Met will be stuffy, showcasing opera’s endless capacity for timeless yarns about betrayal, conflict and intrigue, as well as love and sex.

Verdi’s “Otello” has been dubbed “Fatal Attraction”, while Donizetti’s comedy “La Fille du Regiment” pays

label, the report added.

Last month, Apple completed the acquisitio­n of music discovery app Shazam, a deal to help it better compete with Spotify, the industry leader in music streaming services. (RTRS)

LOS ANGELES:

British songstress Amy Winehouse, more than eight years after her death, will return to the stage in holographi­c form for a live tour set to launch toward the end of 2019.

Proceeds from the tour will go toward the Amy Winehouse Foundation, which is dedicated ode to the Pat Benatar’s campy classic, “Love is a Battlefiel­d”.

Brierley said the marketing is intended to convey that the work will satisfy audience hunger for narrative and storytelli­ng. Potential opera converts are also focused on an opera’s title and composer, recognitio­n of singers and production style, she added.

“It’s just wonderful to see the surprise and the joy of people attending for the first time. And once you get them coming for the first time, invariably they’ll come back,” she said, adding that a key “is to take away the intimidati­on of coming into the building.”

She said the Met planned to make use of a second entrance that will become available in late fall. The revamp was needed to reduce crowding at the box office because so many more people buy tickets at the last minute compared with the subscripti­on-loving generation­s of the past.

The new space will allow for postperfor­mance drinks or group talks. Surveys show young viewers are interested in social experience­s, an endeavor that also helps publicize the Met if experience­s are posted to social media, Brierley said.

Amanda Reyes, who is taking a masters in industrial organizati­on psychology, said she was drawn to opera while growing up in Ohio, but didn’t explore it until hearing about the Met’s program.

“I like the idea of it, but it seemed like something out of reach,” she said in an interview. “A lot of it is to know you won’t be the only younger person here.”

She has since come several times, seeing “Carmen” and “Madama Butterfly”, among others, and bringing other newbies to the parties.

“I tell friends, ‘Come, you can dress up, there’ll be drinks and snacks and you can enjoy the space for a little bit’,” she recounted. “Even if people aren’t super-interested in the opera, that’s usually enough to get them to say, ‘Yeah I’ll check it out’.”

to drug and alcohol abuse awareness and prevention among young people. The sixtime Grammy winner died on July 23, 2011, at age 27 in London after years of publicly battling drug and alcohol addiction.

The tour is being produced by BASE Hologram, which uses holographi­c film technology to produce live entertainm­ent tours and attraction­s worldwide, in partnershi­p with the Winehouse family.

The tour will featured digitally remastered arrangemen­ts of the British singer’s hits – including “Rehab”, “Back to Black” and “Valerie” – with Winehouse’s hologram backed by a live band, singers and “theatrical stagecraft”, according to BASE.

Mitch Winehouse, the late singer’s father, on Thursday tweeted his support of the project: “Our family is delighted to be teaming up with @BASEhologr­am to continue celebratin­g the life and work of Amy, with all proceeds of the tour, starting in late 2019, going to Amy’s Foundation to help even more young people in her name.”

“Amy was a powerhouse in every sense of the word,” Brian Becker, founder and CEO, BASE Entertainm­ent and BASE Hologram, said in announcing the tour. “She played by her own rules, pioneered her own sense of style of music and because of that we know she is the perfect person to headline this type of project.”

LA-based BASE Hologram develops, produces, and distribute­s live entertainm­ent and location-based production­s worldwide that combine holographi­c cinema and mixed reality with live entertainm­ent. The company’s current touring shows include “In Dreams: Roy Orbison – The Hologram Concert”, and “Callas in Concert” featuring famed opera singer Maria Callas as well as next year’s location-based project “Discoverie­s: Jack Horner’s World of Dinosaurs”. (RTRS)

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