So how could a project such as the Conductor’s Jacket influence the future of a performance tradition such as Western classical music? It seems to me that projects such as this one provide the only promising avenue for a strong future for the art form. With audiences aging and declining and the overwhelming pressure of television and the Internet, classical music forms seem doomed to serve a shrinking niche where the standard repertoire is one dependable box-office draw. While there should always be a place and a reverence for the standard repertoire, I don’t think that the reliance on symphonic music of more than 100 years ago indicates a healthy state in this art form. I think that it is now crucial to find ways to gently interface and extend the forms of classical music while respecting its complexity and subtlety. I think that incorporating graphics and amplification and synthesized sounds would help to extend the vocabulary and appeal of classical music to younger audiences, making it more exciting and current.
8.3.1 The Need for New Live Concerts
Ultimately, I’d love to make great performance art with sensors – an art which "exceeds culture" Many media artists share this vision; such a form could be as expressive as a violin, on which one’s own depth of feeling could be communicated. Such an art form would be able to convey magical feeling, the essence of the human artistic experience. Performers in the future will be using gesture in seamless ways as they interact with computers; I also think that conductors and musicians in the future will be using their gestures to control (triggering and modulating pre-composed material more than generating or creating on the fly) interactive graphics, text, video, music, and fireworks displays while they also perform on their instruments with their normal techniques. We as a society are in the midst of defining the new forms. No one knows what will come of the traditional institutions that have served the classical performance traditions for the past century, and yet on the other hand there is a new energy in the area of experimental and electronic music. But one thing is sure – we must use new technology to move, uplift, inspire, and elevate.
One of the unfortunate associations that traditional musicians have with computer music is that MIDI put them out of business; this is because many producers have seen it as a way of saving money by saving on musicians’ fees. They assume that a sequenced version of a score played on synthesizers is as good as the live thing, which is not true. And by jeopardizing the livelihoods of thousands of thousands of working musicians, it has had exactly the wrong kind of effect. My hope is to put them back in business by improving audiences’ appetites for new music.
Will these instruments ever take root? Denis Smalley says no:
Finally, the vision of Immersion Music described at the beginning of this thesis represents a possible future for musical performance. The scenario is that Immersion Music will be a more mainstream realization of electronic music, transcending the stereotypes of it as an experimental form of "music we don’t like yet." It will ideally involve creating new forms of art for the stage that combine the best of classical performance traditions with the best of the new technologies. The Conductor’s Jacket may have a future role as an instrument in the new form of Immersion Music, not as a solo instrument but rather as one that allows a human performer to communicate with others on stage, combining the specificity and expression of gesture with musical feeling.