List of classical music concerts with an unruly audience response

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Riots at the Royal Opera House, 1763 Artaxerxes riots.jpg
Riots at the Royal Opera House, 1763

There have been many notable instances of unruly behaviour at classical music concerts, often at the premiere of a new work or production.

Contents

18th century

ComposerTitleDateLocationDetails
Thomas Arne Artaxerxes February 24, 1763 London At the revival of Thomas Arne's opera Artaxerxes , a mob protesting the abolition of half-price admissions stormed the theatre in the middle of the performance. [1]

19th century

ComposerTitleDateLocationDetails
William Reeve Family Quarrels December 18, 1802LondonPart of the Jewish audience catcalled because of perceived anti-Jewish slights. [2]
Gioachino Rossini The Barber of Seville February 20, 1816 Milan Many audience members were supporters of the elder composer Giovanni Paisiello who had written a Barber of Seville of his own. They shouted, heckled, hissed, and jeered at Rossini's new version of the piece. [3]
Daniel Auber La muette de Portici August 25, 1830 Brussels Audience members at a performance in Brussels left before the end of the opera to join planned riots that were already taking place across the city, marking the beginning of the Belgian Revolution. [4]
Hector Berlioz Benvenuto Cellini September 10, 1838 Paris The audience hissed at most of the music after the first few numbers. [5]
Richard Wagner Tannhäuser (opera) March 14, 1861 Paris The audience was unruly for several reasons. Whistling and cat-calls occurred the night before, during the premiere of the "Paris version," in response to the music, like the shepherd's piping in Act I. Wagner also did not pay the claque's fee in order to prevent disruptions. The interruptions increased during the second performance, when the Jockey-Club de Paris organized a disruption in response to the opera's ballet being placed in the first act instead of the second, which was customary. The jockey members usually arrived in time for the second act in order to see the ballet, and did not take kindly to Wagner's dissent. [6]
Arrigo Boito Mefistofele March 5, 1868MilanThe audience came predisposed to drown out Boito's claqueurs and succeeded in making the music inaudible with their hisses and boos. [7] [8] [9]

20th century

ComposerTitleDateLocationDetails
Francesco Balilla Pratella Musica FuturistaMarch 9, 1913 Rome At the second performance of the work, the audience booed and threw refuse at the orchestra, and some fighting occurred. [10] [11]
Alban Berg Altenberg Lieder March 31, 1913 Vienna As part of a front in Vienna's ongoing style wars, the audience booed and catcalled loudly, and some punches were thrown. The event came to be known as the Skandalkonzert. [12]
Igor Stravinsky The Rite of Spring May 29, 1913ParisDueling factions tried to drown each other out during the ballet's premiere, unwittingly launching generations of exaggerations of what actually happened in the hall that night. [13] [14] [15]
Sergei Prokofiev Piano Concerto No. 2 September 5, 1913 St. Petersburg The work was met with hisses and catcalls. [16]
Luigi Russolo The Awakening of a City, The Meeting of Automobiles and AeroplanesApril 21, 1914MilanA concert organized by the Futurists to provide the first public demonstration of their experimental "noise-making" instruments called intonarumori resulted in an expected fracas, [17] with Futurists led by Filippo Tommaso Marinetti fighting members of the audience in the stalls. [18]
Erik Satie Parade May 18, 1917ParisOne faction of the audience booed, hissed, and was generally unruly, but they were eventually silenced by an enthusiastic ovation. [19] [20]
Anton Webern Five Movements for String Quartet, Op. 5 August 8, 1922 Salzburg Webern attended, interrupting his summer with Schoenberg, who remained in Traunkirchen. He praised the Amar Quartet's performance to Berg, but what unfolded left him "out of sorts" and disturbed his plans to continue composing that summer. The Moldenhauers described the "Salzburg affair" as "a riot ... subdued only by police intervention". Wilhelm Grosz constantly laughed, crying "'furchtbar!' [terrible]" during the fourth movement. Adolf Loos and Rudolf Ganz defended Webern. A London Daily Telegraph reporter wrote, "I never saw an angrier man" of Webern's taking the stage amid the fray, "as if he were going to kill". The Quartet was able to play the music in full to an invitation-only audience the next day. Arthur Bliss, Arthur Honegger, Francis Poulenc, and Jean Wiéner reassured Webern. [21]
Edgard Varèse Hyperprism March 4, 1923 New York The audience laughed throughout and hissed at the conclusion, which prompted Varèse to repeat the work in hopes of a more serious response. [22]
George Antheil Sonata SauvageOctober 4, 1923ParisVery raucous physical altercations and verbal fights broke out within three minutes of Antheil playing, with many distinguished guests in attendance. Artist Man Ray reportedly punched a man in the nose, Marcel Duchamp began hurling obscenities at a fellow audience member, and Erik Satie was heard shouting, "What precision! What precision!" [23]
Henry Cowell Antinomy October 15, 1923 Leipzig The audience threw program notes at Cowell and clambered onto the stage, leading to a large physical altercation and the arrest of over 20 audience members. [24]
Henry Cowell Five Encores to Dynamic Motion October 31, 1923ViennaAn audience member began screaming at Cowell, "Stop! Stop!" and would not be quiet when shushed by audience members, leading to an attempt to drown one other out with continuous catcalling. [25]
Erik Satie Mercure June 15, 1924ParisThe police were called to the premiere due to unruly behavior that sprang from the Parisian cultural infighting of the time. [26]
George Antheil Ballet Mécanique June 19, 1926ParisThe premiere performance received a large ovation despite some unruly behavior in the audience, including an outburst by Ezra Pound, but there were some fistfights in the street after the concert. [27]
Béla Bartók The Miraculous Mandarin November 27, 1926 Cologne The plot caused a commotion in the audience, which began leaving during the performance. [28]
Kurt Weill Rise and Fall of the City of Mahagonny March 9, 1930LeipzigOrganized bands of right-wing agitators planted themselves in the audience and created a large commotion, directed towards the opera's supposed anti-German sentiment. It was subsequently banned by the Nazis in 1933. [29] [30]
Igor Stravinsky Danses concertantes February 27, 1945ParisA group of students from Olivier Messiaen's class, including Serge Nigg and Pierre Boulez, protested noisily with police whistles against the neoclassical style of the compositions. [31]
Igor StravinskyFour Norwegian MoodsMarch 15, 1945ParisSame as above.
Pierre Boulez Polyphonie X October 6, 1951 Donaueschingen Musicologist Antoine Goléa, who attended the concert, recalled: "Those who experienced this Donaueschingen première will remember the scandal as long as they live. Shouts, caterwauling, and other animal noises were unleashed from one half of the hall in response to applause, foot-stamping and enthusiastic bravos from the other". [32] Boulez was unable to attend, but, after hearing a tape of the concert, decided to withdraw the piece. [32]
Edgard Varèse Déserts December 2, 1954ParisThe audience loudly booed and jeered the piece. [33]
Richard Wagner Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg 1956 Bayreuth Festival Bayreuth A new interpretation of Die Meistersinger by Wagner's grandson Wieland Wagner removed elements associated with German nationalism and introduced a minimalist, modernist staging. Particularly controversial was the removal of scenery depicting the city of Nuremberg – setting of the play, but also a central city to Nazi propaganda. The production was booed by the audience throughout the summer of 1956, beginning a tradition of booing at future Bayreuth Festivals. [34]
Luigi Nono Intolleranza 1960 April 13, 1961 Venice The opera's premiere was disrupted by shouts from a neo-fascist faction in the audience. [35] [36]
John Cage Atlas EclipticalisFebruary 6, 1964New YorkPart of an avant-garde season of music featuring the New York Philharmonic conducted by Leonard Bernstein, most performances had received lukewarm responses. This one, with Cage as performer, was met with boos and hisses. Allegedly, the orchestra failed to take the music seriously, and in so doing, effectively sabotaged it. The event was recorded, and released as part of a Bernstein retrospective set. [37] [38]
Hans Werner Henze Das Floß der Medusa December 9, 1968 Hamburg Students hung a Che Guevara banner, the Red, and Black flags, and after the chorus responded in protest, the police began making arrests, prompting Henze to cancel the concert. [39]
Steve Reich Four Organs January 18, 1973New YorkAt a Carnegie Hall performance of the work, the conservative audience tried yelling and sarcastically applauding to hasten the end of the piece, which received both boos and cheers during the ovation. [40] One of the performers, Michael Tilson Thomas, recalls: "One woman walked down the aisle and repeatedly banged her head on the front of the stage, wailing 'Stop, stop, I confess.'" [41] [42]
John Adams Grand Pianola Music 1982New YorkPremiere of the piece at the Horizons Festival, held at Lincoln Center, New York. Audience was booing and cheering. [43]
Harrison Birtwistle Panic 1995LondonBBC received thousands of complaints after its broadcast to millions during the Last Night of the Proms [44]

21st century

ComposerTitleDateLocationDetails
Giuseppe Verdi Aida December 10, 2006MilanWhen tenor Roberto Alagna's opening aria "Celeste Aida" was booed by the loggionisti in the opera house's less expensive seats, he walked off stage while the music was still playing. Understudy Antonello Palombi, in a black dress shirt and slacks, came on a few seconds later to replace him. Alagna did not return to the production. [45]
Steve Reich Piano Phase February 29, 2016CologneDuring a performance of the piece by Iranian harpsichordist Mahan Esfahani in the Kölner Philharmonie, parts of the crowd clapped, whistled, and walked out. Esfahani, as he introduced the piece in English, had been ordered by a heckler to speak in German. Loud arguments between numerous members of the crowd persisted for several minutes; Esfahani stopped his performance and started playing a concerto by C. P. E. Bach instead. He attributed the 'pandemonium' to the choice of a modern composition, while the German media inferred a xenophobic motive. [46]
Giacomo Puccini Tosca January 4, 2023BarcelonaThe controversy primarily stemmed from the unconventional staging of the opera at the Gran Teatre del Liceu. The production featured Mario Cavaradossi as an alter ego of Italian film director Pier Paolo Pasolini, who was murdered in 1975, trying to draw parallels between them as artists seen inconvenient to religious and political powers. Controversial scenes included many references to sexual violence and an invented scene of homosexual prostitution between Pasolini and his alleged killer while the song Love in Portofino played in the background. All this was met with substantial booing from the audience. [47] [48]

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References

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