Drew McManus on the Orchestra business | est. 2003

2014 Orchestra Compensation Reports: The Big Picture

Fri, Jul 7, 2014
Compensation Reports The Big Picture
New for the 2014 Orchestra Compensation Review is the Big Picture overview of all stakeholder compensation. For the past two years, this has been one of the most requested features and I’m happy to provide it as part of this year’s reports. Consequently, in order to make room for all of the data, this post

2014 Orchestra Compensation Reports: Concertmasters

Thu, Jul 7, 2014
Compensation Reports Concertmasters
Although the average concertmaster in the list of those reported experienced an average increase of 3.69 percent, that figure was skewed a bit by a handful of very large increases among a few of the top earners. For example, The New York Philharmonic’s concertmaster went from earning a reported $517,432 in the 2010/11 season to

2014 Orchestra Compensation Reports: Music Directors

Wed, Jul 7, 2014
Compensation Reports Music Directors
For the average music director, the 2011/12 season was a good year financially and from a historical perspective, it was the first time that average annual compensation broke the half-million threshold ($517,649 to be precise). Although a few high profile positions left vacant brought the average increase down from previous seasons, most music directors saw

2014 Orchestra Compensation Reports: Executives

Tue, Jul 7, 2014
Compensation Reports Executives
By many measures, at least non-artistically speaking, the 2011/12 season was one many within the field were happy to put behind them. Labor disputes in Detroit, Philadelphia, and Louisville were beginning to settle down but in Minnesota, the mother of all disputes (so far) was just getting under way with additional nastiness in store at Atlanta,

2014 Orchestra Compensation Reports: Introduction

Mon, Jul 7, 2014
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Much like the 2013 reports, this year’s compensation reports are all about context. For instance, the data covers compensation for the 2011/12 season, which managed to increase the amount of already record breaking austerity driven conflict between stakeholders. Brush fires turned into firestorms but in a turn that might be best characterized as puzzling, average

Promote That Man!

Thu, Jul 7, 2014
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I received an intriguing email in response to yesterday’s post about artist promotion; in particular, the reader was confused about the nature of the relationship between artist and manager as it applies to marketing. Who is responsible for creating the “official” online resource for a soloist, the manager or the artist? I’ve seen pages at

Three Simple Things Artist Managers Can Do To Help Their Clients (but usually don’t)

Wed, Jul 7, 2014
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Artist managers want to help their clients. Really. They do. Yet there never seems to be an end to artist websites that fail to deliver the most basic elements that arts marketing professionals need to adequately publicize their clients. Sure, a number of artist manages farm that work out to a publicist but in the

Almost Back To Normal

Tue, Jul 7, 2014
There’s nothing quite as refreshing as having main power almost within reach after operating on auxiliary power for several days and to that end, I’m still occupied with getting everything shipshape so there’s only a quick pointer to an article in the 6/29/2014 edition of the Green Bay Press Gazette by Paul Srubas that reports

If Supertitles Still Bug You, Then This May Not Be Your Thing

Mon, Jun 6, 2014
Adaptistration Singer
The 6/27/2014 edition of The Verge published an article by Adi Robertson that examines the author’s experience using Google Glass to process translations. Long story short, the device did an excellent job at taking what has become a technologically rooted staple of the concert experience to its next logical evolutionary step. At a showing last

Alex Ross Couldn’t Be More Right (again)

Fri, Jun 6, 2014
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The 6/25/2014 edition of The New Yorker published an article by Alex Ross which examines the Metropolitan Opera’s (Met) ongoing “Klinghoffer” saga. Ross adds yet one more prominent voice of reason to the growing chorus of negative feedback surrounding the Met’s series of executive decisions that produced their decision to cancel the opera’s broadcasts. At
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