PITTSBURGH — Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra officials insist it’s not “American Idol” meets Mozart.
But its new video contest on YouTube does have at least one similarity: voting by the public.
Videos submitted by instrumental soloists will be up for anyone to watch. The top four vote-getters will get a chance to audition for musical director and conductor Manfred Honeck.
The winner - if Mr. Honeck picks one at all - gets $10,000 and a paid trip to perform with the orchestra at Heinz Hall this fall.
But the orchestra says the contest is no classical “American Idol.”
“Not at all,” said Robert Moir, the orchestra’s senior vice president of artistic planning and audience engagement. “This is applying 21st-century technology to something we’ve been doing since orchestras began, and that’s scouting young talent.”
Mr. Moir and Mr. Honeck revealed the idea to the Associated Press in advance of Thursday’s news conference formally announcing the nationwide contest hosted on the popular YouTube online video platform. The orchestra’s Facebook page and website also have links.
People who play any one of 10 instruments - piano, violin, cello, flute, oboe, clarinet, bassoon, horn, trumpet or harp - can upload clips up to 10 minutes long on YouTube through March 22. The musicians must play certain concertos without accompaniment, and orchestra musicians and other officials will judge the clips and post 20 semifinalist videos on April 13. The public will vote on the finalists until April 30, with the top four winning paid trips to Pittsburgh to audition for Mr. Honeck in June.
The winner will play their concerto with the orchestra Nov. 30 and Dec. 2 as part of its BNY Mellon Grand Classics subscription concert series.
Jesse Rosen, president and chief executive officer of the League of American Orchestras, said technology is changing the way orchestras interact with their patrons. Mr. Rosen said the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra is one of several with “tweeting sections” where the audience is free to post Twitter comments about the performance as it happens. The District-based National Symphony Orchestra was one of the first to deliver real-time program notes via Twitter during a performance in 2009.
But Mr. Rosen said the Pittsburgh contest is “very much a leading-edge thing. They’re in the forefront. This is not something others are doing.”
Mr. Honeck and Mr. Moir stressed they’re not sacrificing quality for the sake of popular input or appeal.
“If we don’t find somebody at the level that we think is appropriate for our subscription concerts, we have the right not to put anybody on,” Mr. Moir said. “We don’t have to have a winner.”
“But we’re both pretty confident that the level is there just because we’ve both been using the Internet so much [to scout talent] and we’ve seen so many people who we’ve never heard of before who are so talented we think that this is probably going to bring us a lot more of these young interesting artists,” Mr. Moir said.
The contest is open only to legal U.S. residents - which includes students here on visas and other noncitizens in the country legally - and only to those 18 or older (19 in Alabama and Nebraska, and 21 in Mississippi) because laws governing such contests require it. Contestants also cannot be represented by a talent agency or have previously been represented. That’s for legal reasons and because it would defeat the purpose of finding “unknown” talent, Mr. Moir said.
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