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Hilary Hahn



Last Updated: 12/3/2009

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Status: Single
City: NEW YORK
State: NEW YORK
Country: US
Signup Date: 7/5/2005
Monday, June 15, 2009 
Note from Laurie: Hilary wrote this in response to an ArtsJournal blog by her publicist, Amanda Ameer, in which Amanda confessed that, while live-Tweeting a concert (for Twitter, and yes we are all still figuring out what exactly Twitter is!) "It seems I had missed a few things whilst clicking." So she asked Hilary: Is it okay to "Tweet" during a live performance, for the sake of spreading the news? Here is Hilary's answer:

...........................

I'm all for Tweeting and spreading the word, but not during performances. Between pieces, maybe, if you can stop when the music starts up again; while standing in line for the restroom, definitely; at intermission or on the train afterwards, definitely. The problem is that acoustic performers rely on the audience's attention and focus and can tell when the audience isn't mentally present. Your listening is part of our interpretive process. If you're not really listening, we're not getting the feedback of energy from the hall, and then we might as well be practicing for a bunch of people peering in the window. It's just not as interesting when the cycle of interpretation is broken.

If you are Tweeting, then you might as well check your emails, and then you might as well just turn on the camera and make a recording for YouTube, and then you might as well have a little chat online while you're at it, or play a game of Tetris or Scrabble, or write down ideas for that presentation you have to give next week. In that case, really, the question is, why are you here? Are you enjoying the beauty of the live concert experience, in which moments are fleeting and you have to get caught up in the flow because it will never be the same again?

There's also the distraction factor. The stage is a great vantage point and a prime spot of acoustical convergence. It may be possible for you to do multiple things at once, but the same may not be true of the performers and your fellow audience members. They may not be able to keep themselves from wondering what you're writing instead of just listening and concentrating on their own individual experiences. You may not be able to delve into your own listening experience if you're thinking about what other people should be thinking.

Finally, it seems to me that listeners make things difficult for themselves by observing themselves in the third person and putting their thoughts into a narrative before those thoughts can fully form. I feel that concerts can be a break from outside pressures and influences. For audience members, a concert should be like a vacation on a distant beach with a stack of good books. Comfortable seats. No one trying to call you. No one breaking into your trains of thought. No way to reach the outside world. Just a time to shut off and calm down and treat yourself to something truly wonderful. If we can't sit through a classical concert we pay decent money for, and we can't take two hours out of an evening to shut out everyone else's demands and opinions and thoughts, where does that leave us?

http://www.violinist.com/blog/HilaryHahn/20096/10222/
Chris Hodges

 
Well put. I hate it when I'm trying to enjoy a concert but the screen light from the person in front of me is glaring or the flash from the camera of someone taking a picture of themselves at the show is making me see spots...I am a tech geek but not at concerts.
 
Posted by Chris Hodges on Wednesday, September 16, 2009 - 8:23 PM
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Adam
Adam Keele

 
All very important and true words. 
I first thought from a performers point of view (I don't have a Tweeter account by the way), but since you are in front of the orchestra all the time, it does make much sense at all--being a trumpet player and in or close to the back row, this is something you really can get away with most of the time, depending on the type/level of performance.  Still, the music comes first!  I don't care if you are a trumpet player playing Mozart, or an audience member listening to some Mozart, it's still should be a fun and engaging experience.  For me, whether it's Mozart or Mahler, the part gets the same attention.  I love playing trumpet and being apart of the music, whether simple or a serious challenge. 
I miss the days when a phone was a phone, EVEN when it had a cord attached to it--and not a charger!  Sometimes not being so connected is a good thing...

 
Posted by Adam on Wednesday, September 16, 2009 - 8:25 PM
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Robert Folsom

 
First, I would never tweet during a classical music concert; it would disturb those around me. Also, a classical music concert requires active listening, as opposed to passive listening. But there is another reason: I would miss the concert.
I recently shot video of a -- now stick with me here -- tomato roll in suburban Kansas City. People bought chances on numbered "tomatoes" (more like toy baseballs, not real tomatoes), and a bulldozer dumped them and sent them rolling down the street. Whoever's was first, won. Whoever's was last also "won," but it was a gag prize.
Well, looking through the viewer of my camcorder, I shot the video. But I did not see the event. I did not take in all of my surroundings at this celebration of American kitsch. I'll bet a proud father shooting video of his daughter's entire wedding experiences the same thing: He wants to record the event for forever, but he never sees it.
And that's why I would never tweet during a classical music concert. I want to experience the concert, not miss out on it because I was tweeting something like, "Hahn nailed the Sibelius," keeping it under 140 characters.
But I have seen newspaper reviewers tweet from rock shows, or I've gotten a text from a friend/reviewer at a rock show telling me about the crowd or the band's performance or something. So tweeting or texting from a venue where your biggest worry is somebody might spill a beer on you, well, that's something else altogether.
And, so far anyway, I haven't had to worry about getting a beer spilled on me during an indoor, I'll say, classical music concert.
Tweet, tweet.

 
Posted by Robert Folsom on Wednesday, September 16, 2009 - 8:25 PM
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Geoff

 
Hear, hear!

Or should that be, "Listen, listen!" ?
 
Posted by Geoff on Wednesday, September 16, 2009 - 8:25 PM
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Steven

 
I could not have possibly put it better myself.
 
Posted by Steven on Wednesday, September 16, 2009 - 8:25 PM
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fail.

 
I am against twitter in general on for personal use... but the commercial use of it has gotten so huge so fast I still never plan on using it. Surprised I'm still using myspace after this many years,... hence having no new photos in 5 years! Very good points though! It's about the MUSIC!

And while I'm commenting, when are you coming to Chicago again?! I didn't get to see you when you came back in March I believe and I've been waiting for another announcement about you playing at CSO again. Let me know in a comment or message or however if you catch the time, you are simply amazing.

 
Posted by fail. on Wednesday, September 16, 2009 - 8:27 PM
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Chris@Home

 
My opinion: no tweeting at all during concerts. Like Ms. Hahn said, your attention should be with the performance and surely not with the 'outside world'.

 
Posted by Chris@Home on Wednesday, September 16, 2009 - 8:28 PM
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Arcadian Skies

 
Weird ... -
Would anybody twitter while being intimate with his/her lover? I can't imagine ... !
So, do we really have to talk about a concern like this with anybody?



Much love and admiration to you, Hilary.
I would never accept needing a twitter thingie while listening to your outstanding performances ...



Petra


 
Posted by Arcadian Skies on Wednesday, September 16, 2009 - 8:28 PM
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postmodernfunk

 
well said.

 
Posted by postmodernfunk on Wednesday, September 16, 2009 - 8:28 PM
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Rhachel
Rhachel Toombs

 
Plurk instead...it's sooo much better than Tweeting.

But on a more serious note...
I think the most recent generations, unfortunately, have grown so used to having so much happening all at once, so much information being thrown at them all the time to process, that just stopping still and sitting, reflecting, enjoying, receiving, even thinking, have become uncomfortable.

 
Posted by Rhachel on Wednesday, September 16, 2009 - 8:29 PM
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Peter
Peter Rowe

 
Or, one can just sum it all up simply by noting that tweeting while the concert is going on is just plain rude.  Rude to the other audience members, and rude to the performers.   Just as it's not OK to answer your cell phone (or even leave it on at all, for that matter) during the performance,  tweeting, texting, or otherwise not giving the performance the attention and respect it, and the performer, deserves, is just not nice.   The world managed to get along just fine without the instant updates of twitter before it existed, and it can continue to do so for the time one is enjoying a fine musical event. 

 
Posted by Peter on Wednesday, September 16, 2009 - 8:29 PM
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The Kit Ruscoe band

 
"The problem is that acoustic performers rely on the audience's attention and focus and can tell when the audience isn't mentally present. Your listening is part of our interpretive process. If you're not really listening, we're not getting the feedback of energy from the hall, and then we might as well be practicing for a bunch of people peering in the window."

So true, now try getting them all drunk and see what happens. hee hee...

 
Posted by The Kit Ruscoe band on Wednesday, September 16, 2009 - 8:32 PM
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Veronica

 
well written Hilary
 
Posted by Veronica on Wednesday, September 16, 2009 - 8:42 PM
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Stargazer

 
No tweeting, cameras, mobile phones, etc during classical concerts, of course.

 
Posted by Stargazer on Thursday, September 24, 2009 - 4:47 PM
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