Alpesh Chauhan
On Wednesday, July 20, 2016 AfriClassical posted:
Today Bob Shingleton writes:
Bob
On An Overgrown Path
Thursday, July 21, 2016
A puff for upcoming Proms in the Independent is headlined
'You don't need to be a white, middle-aged man to wield a baton' and it
is very good indeed to see the immensely talented 26 year old British
Asian Alpesh Chauhan on the podium in the Royal Albert Hall twice this weekend (July 23 & 24). Alpesh Chauhan - seen above - follows in the footsteps of Indian born Zubin Mehta who has conducted thirteen Proms, the most recent in 2011. But, despite that click baiting headline, it is still fiendishly difficult if you are a black man, yet alone a black woman, to wield a baton at the BBC Proms. In more than 2500 Promenade concerts there have been just three black conductors - all men - and the last one was back in 2003. It is also not insignificant that the 2003 Prom conducted by African American Bobby McFerrin was, like Alpesh Chauhan's two Proms this weekend, not the main evening concert but a daytime event. So sorry to spoil a good Indie headline, but the main events on both Saturday and Sunday in the Albert Hall have white, middle-aged men wielding the baton.
But let's be fair, there is progress. The BBC has a 'Black and British' season
of programmes exploring diversity airing in November. One of the
programmes with the working title of 'Young, Gifted and Classical' is
about the 17-year-old black cellist Sheku Kanneh-Mason who won the 2016 BBC Young Musician competition, and in October BBC Radio 3 is hosting a Diversity and Inclusion in Composition conference
in Manchester. I just wish I could be more enthusiastic about these BBC
diversity initiatives. But in today's BBC, altruism comes a long way
behind brand building, and there is little reason to think that these
new initiatives will be an exception. The BBC press release headline for
the Sheku Kanneh-Mason documentary plugs the BBC Young Musician
sub-brand relentlessly, while this weekend's concerts conducted by
Alpesh Chauhan are part of a heavily BBC branded education project. Plus ça change...
It is wonderful that Alpesh Chauhan and Sheku Kanneh-Mason are in the
limelight. But they have already been snapped up by super-agents Hazard Chase and IMG Artists
respectively, and their careers are secure. Let's hope the BBC's
diversity season also includes a programme about the less fortunate
black classical musicians who face institutionalised discrimination. There is no better case study for this than Rudolph Dunbar, who was born in the then British Guiana in 1907, became the first black conductor of the Berlin Philharmonic in 1945
and went on to conduct the BBC Symphony Orchestra. However Rudolph
Dunbar's career went into an unexplained decline in the decade leading
up to his death in 1988. Dunbar's brief obituary in the Musical Times
recounts how: 'He gradually withdrew from public life, and devoted
himself to fighting racism and trying to increase black involvement in
Western art music'. But there is compelling evidence that this is not
the whole story. In his book Musical Life in Guyana Dr Vibert C. Cambridge of Ohio University
recounts how in an interview six months before his death: 'Dunbar spoke
about the particular vindictiveness of a producer/director of music at
the BBC who derailed his musical career in Europe. Dunbar described that
director of music as “despicable and vile” and the BBC “as stubborn as
mules and ruthless as rattlesnakes”'.
Investigating these allegations, which have been independently supported,
is much more than an academic exercise; because the alleged
discrimination would have occurred contemporaneously with the abuse
within the BBC that precipitated the Savile scandal.
Uncovering the truth about the treatment of Rudolph Dunbar would aid
the understanding of the management culture within the BBC, an
institution that in the intervening years has increased its stranglehold on classical music in Britain.
If the BBC mined its own archives we would finally know the truth about
what really ended the career of one of the first great black
conductors. What a valuable contribution that would be to the BBC's
diversity season. But I'm not holding my breath.
No comments:
Post a Comment