Associated Press
Sunday, Oct. 8
Boston — Wander Boston’s more diverse neighborhoods and you’re more likely to hear Beyonce than Brahms or Drake than Dvorak.
The Boston Symphony Orchestra says that’s about to change.
Starting this month, the renowned orchestra is reaching out to Jamaica Plain,
Roxbury and Dorchester — culturally vibrant corners of the city that haven’t fully
embraced classical music — to get a better grasp of their musical roots and needs.
Thomas Wilkins, the BSO’s youth and family concerts conductor, said
the goal is “to build deep and meaningful relationships with people ...
alongside the rich cultural
offerings of their unique neighborhoods.”
“We
must share this amazing music that touches so many of us with those who
may not otherwise be able to experience it,” said Wilkins, the
136-year-old
orchestra’s first black conductor. “It’s the right thing to
do.”
It’s
part of a growing trend of U.S. symphonies taking it to the streets.
Florida’s
Jacksonville Symphony, New Jersey’s Newark Symphony, the
Detroit Symphony
Orchestra and others are bringing the classics to
audiences whose musical
traditions have favored other genres.
The
“BSO in Residence” initiative kicked off last weekend in Jamaica Plain
with a free outdoor concert in Franklin Park, the city’s largest green
space, followed by a question-
and-answer session at Margarita Muniz
Academy, a dual English-Spanish
language high school.
Next up:
appearances and workshops at other schools to give young Bostonians
of
color a chance to meet and play with key orchestra members.
For
years, the Boston Symphony and its sister orchestra — the Boston Pops —
have worked to expose residents of the city’s ethnic neighborhoods to
classical music.
But those efforts mostly have involved bringing
people to Symphony Hall
or to the orchestra’s summer home at Tanglewood
in the Berkshires of western Massachusetts.
“ ‘Maybe we shouldn’t
ask them to come to us — maybe we should go to them’
is a good concept,”
said David France, executive director of Revolution of Hope,
a
world-class youth orchestra in Roxbury.
France, a classical
violinist who’s performed with Quincy Jones and John Legend but also
plays in the subway, said he’s learned the value of bringing music to
places
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