It seems like every news report has an update on how the bad fluepidemic this winter continues to get worse, filling emergency rooms and hospital beds, and killing especially the young and the elderly.
So here is what The Ear wants to know: How is the bad flu epidemic affecting the classical music scene in Madison?
After all, the second half of the season is just getting underway. This month will see performances by the Madison Opera, the University Opera, the Madison Symphony Orchestra, the Wisconsin Chamber Orchestra, the Willy Street Chamber Players, the Wisconsin Baroque Ensemble, the Wisconsin Union Theater, various performers at the University of Wisconsin-Madison’s Mead Witter School of Music, and many more.
He wants to hear both ideas and first-person stories or experiences from performers, presenters and audience members.
Has the fear of getting sick kept you, as an individual or group, from performing or affected your performance?
Has the flu affected the overall attendance of performances?
Has the flu, and fear of catching it, already kept you personally from being in a crowd and attending a performance or concert? How about in the future?
What could local music presenters do to help the situation?
Do you think providing surgical face masks would help?
Should people exhibiting symptoms be asked to leave, either by other patrons or by an usher or another official representative, as The Ear heard was done recently at a volunteer food pantry?
Should organizations make it easier to exchange dates or get a refund if you are ill?
Leave an answer or suggestion in the COMMENT section.
And let us all hope that the deadly flu epidemic starts to ebb very soon.
It is happening more and more frequently these days, it seems to The Ear.
You see them offered as a helpful courtesy in hospitals and clinics, in the offices of doctors and dentists.
I am talking about those disposable surgical masks that hook around the ears and cover the nose and mouth, and are intended to help cut down on the risks of spreading contagious and infectious diseases.
So as the weekend approaches and the 2013-2014 concert season picks up again after the holidays and the usual winter intermission, The Ear find himself asking: Should those masks be offered at concerts – perhaps even for a small fee if they are expensive? After all, some venues already offer free cough drops.
You can could use the mask protect yourself if you are well, or else to protect others if you are sick. Big audiences, after all, can be like one big hospital ward or Petri dish. And as one bog suggested, they might even have a logo printed on them as a promotion or marketing tool if you use them away form the concert hall.
And the audiences for classical music are generally older — which also means they have weaker immune systems and generally a greater susceptibility to serious effects of the flu and other illnesses. Next time you are in one in January and February, just listen for the hacking and sneezing and blowing of noses. Those can be more than annoyances.
Offering masks would be good for public health, and it might also help reduce the annoyance of coughing, a topic I posted about yesterday in the following link:
You see those masks used everywhere in Asian culture. But our own culture seems to see them as ugly and stigmatizing rather than as a sign of respect for other people’s health and a contribution to protecting the general public’s health. (Also look at the YouTube video at the bottom about wearing surgical masks in Japan.)
It turns out that The Ear is not the only one with this on his mind.
The incredible British pianist Stephen Hough – who has performed several times in Madison — also posted something recently on his blog for the Telegraph newspaper about using surgical masks – perhaps to protect his own health as he tours around the world playing recitals, concertos and chamber music.
Here is a link to his thoughtful essay. Be sure to read the readers’ comments and reactions.
And be sure to leave your own reactions to the idea in the COMMENT section of this blog.