The Economist

(Steven Felgate) #1

68 Books and arts The EconomistAugust 4th 2018


2 of government bonds) are still arguing
with those who believe that premature
monetary tightening will damage a still-
fragile economy.
The big change has been in the public
mood. The idea that markets left to their
own devices will efficiently and fairly allo-
cate resources had gained adherents in the
1990s and early 2000s. Centre-left govern-
ments such as Tony Blair’s were happy to
leave the financial markets to get on with it.
Now those middle-ground politicians are
out of office as voters peel off towards the
far-left and nationalist right.
Even the Republican Party in America
has swallowed its free-market instincts
and is tolerating President Trump’s protec-
tionist measures and threatening behav-
iour towards firms he takes against. Many
British Conservatives have been overtly
hostile towards those business leaders
who express fears about Brexit. The idea
that trade makes everyone better off in the
long run is no longer universal; indeed Mr
Trump sees it as a zero-sum game. These
views are showing up in the numbers: glo-
bal trade has stopped growing much faster
thanGDP as it did before the crisis.
This change of mood raises fears about
what will happen when another storm
hits the world economy. The level of co-op-
eration that occurred in 2008 and 2009
such as when America’s central bank
made dollars available to its cash-strapped
European counterparts may not be easy to
achieve next time around.
Tomorrow’s chroniclers will be grateful
for Mr Tooze’s assiduous research. He
leaves no mortgage-backed security un-
covered no collateralised debt obligation
unexamined in his effort to produce the
most comprehensive account of this com-
plex and gripping subject. The general
reader might find it a bit of a slog. It is not
that the author cannot see the wood for the
trees more that the forest is so large and
dark that it is easy to get lost. Sometimes
the broader themes simply get overshad-
owed by an account of another round of
cliffhanger meetings.
Mr Tooze ends by comparing events to-
day with those in 1914 when the world
sleepwalked into conflict. But arguably it is
the interwar period that is the most perti-
nent parallel. The armistice ended the first
war but the tensions that generated the first
conflict simmered and finally exploded
once more.
For policymakers another deadly met-
aphor is perhaps more appropriate. Cen-
tral banks brought a global economic heart
attack to an end by performing emergency
surgery. But the patient has gone back to
his old habits ofsmoking heavy drinking
and gorging on fatty foods. He may be
looking healthy now. But the next attack
could be even more severe and the medi-
cal techniques that worked a decade ago
may not be successful a second time. 7

T

HE birth of Washington’s National
Symphony Orchestra (NSO) in 1931
was modest not to say eccentric. Milton
Schwartz a local violinist later described
being approached by a “seedy-looking per-
son in an old coat” who announced: “I am
here to form a symphony orchestra. I just
heard you play and I like you very much.” 
The person was Hans Kindler then the
principal cellist of the Philadelphia Or-
chestra. Kindler was well-respected but
his reputation—and those of several subse-
quent music directors including the Rus-
sian cellist Mstislav Rostropovich—never
managed to elevate theNSOto the orches-
tral big league. The New York Philharmon-
ic the Boston and Chicago symphonies
and the Cleveland and Philadelphia or-
chestras are all considered superior as are
the Berlin Philharmonic the orchestra of
the Vienna State Opera and London en-
sembles such as the London Symphony
Orchestra (LSO). Until now at least.
Last year theNSOhired Gianandrea
Noseda an Italian conductor as its music
director. In recent years he has revitalised
Turin’s Teatro Regio; he is also principal
guest conductor of theLSO. Improving an
orchestra Mr Noseda explains is a less tan-
gible business than turning around a com-
pany: “You have to make the musicians
feel that they’re burning in their hearts and
souls.” The players however cannot sim-
ply be instructed to ignite. As Mr Noseda
points out “you don’t get there through
philosophy but through rehearsals.”
In the ecology of orchestras being

great rather than merely good matters
even if concert-goers might not always be
able to tell the difference. A reputation for
greatness attracts better musicians and
larger audiences plus invitations to per-
form at superior outside venues. All that
results in more philanthropic giving the
lifeblood of many arts institutions in
America (and increasingly in Europe too).
The stakes make those rehearsals vital.
In them a maestro must work his magic
with 100-or-so professionals who may
have performed the standard repertoire
dozens of times. Mr Noseda says they must
feel as though they are performing the
world premiere of say Beethoven’s Fifth
Symphony rather than the millionth ren-
dition of it. To that end he strives to find
undiscovered aspects of each score. After
explaining his approach to his musicians
he conveys his ideas mostly through ges-
tures. Above all he wants the orchestra’s
members to listen to one another: “I try to
create an atmosphere of chamber music.”
It seems to be working. As his first sea-
son in Washington came to an end a con-
cert combining Bach with Luciano Berio
an Italian experimental composer was
well-attended with a strikingly large con-
tingent of 20- to 30-somethings. The or-
chestra played exquisitely. Gary Ginstling
the NSO’s executive director says that
since Mr Noseda’s arrival the NSOhas at-
tracted new board members and sizeable
donations. Subscription salesare up—the
first increase in a decade. Perhaps the big
league beckons. 7

Classical music

How to make a great orchestra


WASHINGTON DC
An Italian maestro works his magic in America

Noseda lights the fire
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