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  1. So that was 2010 digital developments in the arts!

    Hannah Rudman on big screenIt’s that time of year again for Hannah Rudman to sum up the 2010 digital developments in the cultural sector. Generally, we’ve seen more audience participation online and in venue, and digital access to culture becoming a mainstream activity.

    Here’s my pick of the main developments in each art form: for more detail on what individual arts organisations have been up to, especially in Scotland, visit the AmbITion Scotland website for video case studies.AmbITion logo

    Music
    2010 was the year the music industry got its way, when the graduated-response method of dissuading piracy was adopted by parliament. Digital downloads hit £370m this year – a fifth of UK music sales – but 76 percent of downloads are ‘illegal’.
    —1.2 billion tracks downloaded illegally (source: Harris Interactive) – retail value: £984,000 (source: BPI).
    —That’s 76 percent of all downloads (source: BPI).
    —P2P use was up 7% (source: Harris Interactive).
    If the Digital Economy Act measures get implemented, labels will have recourse against illegal P2P, the primary unauthorised channel. They spent the rest of this year turning their attention to websites which host songs without authorisation [source]. (Whether they’ll go after Google, who of course direct so many to so much “free” music…)

    Classical Music
    For the past few months, the SPCO has been experimenting with on-line coupons to reach new audiences. In May 2010 they trialled their first on-line coupon venture via Groupon, and sold about 80 coupons for a specific concert (of which 60 were actually redeemed). They then trialled Travelzoo. In October, they offered an inexpensive two-concert “flex pack” for the current season, and sold more than 500 of them. In December 2010, they offered a season pass for Thursday and Friday night concerts for the rest of the season via Living Social, and sold more than 1400 passes — an amazing number for a one-day sale! [source].

    Many classical music and ballet organisations have been simulcasting concerts with great success – the business model works, and this has been proven by the Met Opera, now three years down the line.

    Opera
    In 2006, the Met began transmitting live, high-definition opera performances into movie theaters, beginning with six shows in 248 theaters in eight countries. The current season features 12 operas in 1,500 theaters in 46 countries. Last season, 2.4 million tickets were sold to nine different shows. The Met’s share of the gross was $24 million, and after subtracting production costs and revenue-sharing payments to its unions, the company realized over $8 million in net revenue.

    Said Peter Gelb, the Met’s general manager, “For the first time in its recent history, or maybe in all of its history, the Met has discovered a new source of revenue that has expanded its capacity and is helping to ensure the education of future audiences at same time.”

    Last season, each HD transmission reached an average of 267,000 paying customers (Mr. Gelb notes that a successful opera DVD today sells 20,000 to 30,000 units world-wide), a major audience boost. The company also has picked up about 7,000 new individual donors thanks to the transmissions, a valuable resource for an institution that relies on contributions to supply about 40% of its annual operating budget. In addition, even given the recession, paid, nondiscounted ticket sales increased to 85% of the box office last year, compared with 76% when Gelb took over. [source]

    Theatre
    2010 has seen the success of distributed live performance through simulcasting begin with UK productions – see my blog about National Theatre Scotland’s experiment at Traverse Theatre, and increased audience acceptance of pre-recorded theatre. These are new business models for UK theatre, and have created new audiences interested in the new hybrid format at a new pricepoint. NT Live (see too this blog) and & digitaltheatre.com are the biggest success story so far, digitaltheatre.com utilising the internet as a global distribution channel for sale of HD recordings – video on demand (VOD) and download to own (DTO).

    There have been interesting experiments this year where filmed performances have been distributed digitally live (think NTLive! simulcasting to cinemas), and on-demand (think digitaltheatre.com). But what about making work available to closed, finite networks to increase access, and enhancing it with distributed live elements such as Q&A with the cast? That’s what Arts & Theatres Trust Fife are up to this December: screening a special free performance of its Christmas show, Jock and the Beanstalk, by award-winning theatre company Wee Stories, from Dunfermline’s Carnegie Hall to children’s wards in six hospitals across Scotland via a private Web TV channel provided by Solus, enabling the show to be transmitted across various digital media on Fife’s network of linked screens to a wider audience as well as the hospitals. Staff from ATTFife staff went to all the 6 locations in Scotland, to facilitate a live webcast Q&A session with the cast and children at each location on the afternoon of 21st December.

    Dance
    Dance has been the core content of the year’s most popular digital developments: 3D film, and the natural user interfaces (NUIs) of gaming devices like Wii (you could liven up the post Christmas lunch slump in front of the TV with a family game of Dance on Broadway for Wii…).
    The pressure to come up with new and exciting dance moves often keeps choreographers thinking outside the box. but 2010 has posed a new challenge: with the flood of 3-D film releases, they must also think outside the frame.

    “It’s not just the choreography within the frame but the frame itself,” says Jon Chu, director of “Step Up 3D. With 3-D, the frame becomes a much more active partner, and it becomes a duet between audience and dancers.” [source]

    Literature
    The iPad and the Kindle have been changing the marketplace for e-books, ensuring their popularity and lower price point. Many e-books now have interactive elements too. However, the paper book is not dead, even if some of the mega/cahin paper bookstores are. Curated, local independent bookstores are thriving, supplementing book sales with live events and reading clubs. [source]

    Visual arts
    Audience and Experts have co-curated the Walker Art Gallery’s latest exhibition, aptly named 50/50. Using a digital kiosk in a Walker gallery and an online survey at walkerart.org, individuals cast nearly a quarter-million votes on whether particular artworks should “definitely” or “maybe not” be included in the exhibition 50/50. Crowd curation at its best!

    Museums
    Brooklyn Museum’s had a great time working with GPS location game FourSquare, rewarding the Mayor on the first Saturday of every month with an annual membership, and incentivising other Foursquare users with offers and prizes. and the Museum of London has given its archive a new lease of life on anyone’s smart phone and on the streets of London via an augmented reality application “Street Museum“.

    That of course is just the tip of the iceberg. Please do review my 2010 blogs for more case studies. Thanks for reading this year, and I’ll be back in 2011, probably with some predictions of where I think we’ll be at in the arts, with digital, by the end of 2011!

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  2. AmbITion Consultants Reflect

    Cameron Leask from Escrivo and Jill MacRae from Blether Media talk about the AmbITion organisations they have been working with as Specialist Advisors on the AmbITion Scotland programme. Jill discusses developments with Poor Boy Theatre Company, and Cameron, Dance Ihayami and Y dance (Scottish Youth Dance).

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  3. Interim Mini Case Study: Promote YT (AmbITion Scotland 2010)

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  4. Interim Mini Case Study: Cryptic (AmbITion Scotland 2010)

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  5. Traverse Theatre simultaneously broadcasts live rehearsed readings

    In a great Edinburgh Fringe Festival experiment on 23.08.10, a compendium of new plays, realised as rehearsed readings, were simultaneously transmitted to UK Picturehouse film theatres, including Edinburgh’s Cameo. Despite over-demand for tickets to the live show at the Traverse, Traverse Live! remained a one-off live performance for a small audience, but the show increased its scale, reach impact and accessibility through simultaneous broadcast.

    Cameras setting up

    As part of the small audience in the theatre, there was palapable excitement as we were directed to our seats, being warned by the camera operators from Hibrow Productions dressed in black not to trip over their kit and the wires! On stage, 1 camera was on a tripod with wheels, 2 were on static tripods, 1 camera was hand-held but could be rested on a tripod which was positioned in a row of audience seating. Another roving camera was in the wings and moved up to the projection box to provide aerial and wide context shots.

    As the theatre is a small black box, we were obviously going to be very aware of the camera operators’ presence, but they were all linked in to a floor manager/director communicating with them and the broadcasters by headphones. In fact, once the action began, they didn’t distract from the action, although I was intrigued by seeing the close-up shots of the actors in the view-finder of the camera operator nearest me.

    Dominic Hill introduces the evening

    Dominic Hill, the Artistic Director of The Traverse welcomed us and explained that there would be breaks in the running order as at our end the stage and cameras were reset for the next play, and as the cinema audiences were shown previously recorded interviews and rehearsal videos (this considered more interesting than making them watch the changeover!). He also explaned that the camera crew would be moving around us, so we knew to expect that they might come and sit next to us, or shove an elbow in our faces as they searched for a better shot! Dominic also then did another introduction direct to camera for the cinema audience, so that they also knew exactly what to expect. He set the context, and gave us an idea of what the experience was going to be like so that we all felt comfortable.

    There was usually about five minutes between the plays. In the theatre, we chatted whilst the VT played (video tape – a now somewhat out of date reference to pre-recorded material) and the floor manager shouted countdowns, to warn actors, stage crew, camera crew, and us audience of when we’d be going live again. It felt like Brechtian theatre – we were being shown all the mechanics, but also I felt like an engaged participant, a part of the show: as audience members in the same space, we were on camera as shots panned round to capture our reactions. We had a unique experience, but then so did audience members in the 30 cinemas around the country: the experience was distributed and increased audience numbers for the work at least 20-fold [Traverse to confirm exact numbers].

    Actors were mic-ed up for the broadcast, but there was no amplified feedback in the auditorium (not needed). Apparently one mic failed in one of the plays, but the live audience didn’t notice this. The beginning of the broadcast had to be restarted due to some technical failure, but again, this was clearly communicated by the floor manager, we were “re-set”, and off we went again. Friends of mine who were at Edinburgh’s Cameo Cinema watching said this did not matter. Obviously the audience at Edinburgh’s Cameo Cinema was fairly small due to the majority of us being at the live show, but there were Traverse Theatre marketing staff present, receiving phone calls reporting that “Brixton was full!” and “I can’t believe I’m watching a Traverse fringe show in Malvern”! This is the important significance of distributed, live theatre. Audiences who would never have otherwise seen the work saw it at locations convenient to them; and at an acceptable price point. The work did not have massively high production values – it was a rehearsed reading, so more about giving new work air and audience time.

    For cinema audience members that I talked to directly, the format of rehearsed readings worked and translated well on the big screen – they’re minimally staged and blocked and so work with the close-up demands of a camera. This cinema audience member commented on Andrew Dixon’s Guardian review of the show:

    “I saw the show from a local cinema last night and really enjoyed it. Yes, there were technical glitches, some a bit irritating – the first piece was marred by one character’s voice being mic’d so low – but mostly I thought it added to the raw energy of the evening. Some really good performances from the cast. A very different experience from the live performances screened from the National Theatre which were very polished. But then this is the Traverse, not the NT. They’re not the same thing at all. I hope this is the start of many more such performances. On a purely mercenary note, I’m very happy to exchange the 90+ minute drive to the NT and a high ticket price for a 20 minute drive to the cinema and a seat that costs under £10. It won’t replace theatre but it’s not TV either. Well done, Traverse.”

    And so to the techie bit – how did the Traverse and Hibrow Productions do it?
    Simultaneous broadcast is not the same as simulcast. (Simulcast uses military-strength satellite broadband to transmit shows to cinemas internationally.) Simultaneous broadcast is the transmission of a live broadcast using the live broadcast spectrum and network, via satellite. It does not transmit internationally (different segment of the broadcast spectrum are used for different purposes in other countries, so may not be on the same frequency) and special kit is required: receiving cinemas needed receiver dishes and decoders. (Sky Sports for example distribute live UK football matches to anywhere in the UK with a Sky receiver dish and decoder.)

    In the theatre, a live vision mixing editor worked with a computer loaded with editing software, all the prerecorded material, a sound feed, and feeds from the five cameras. The editor generated a live mix (this had been rehearsed), which was then sent from the computer as a single stream to be broadcast.

    Inside the OB van

    An outside broadcast van sat on the street outside the Traverse’s main doors, receiving the high definition live mix from the theatre, and sending it out to the live broadcast spectrum and network of receivers and transmitters via satellite. Fibre optic cable and a back-up copper cable carried the signal, and ran directly from the theatre to the OB van (we traced it running down the stairs and through the foyer!).

    OB van outside the Traverse

    Sir Richard Eyre says in the Hibrow Productions cinema trailer – “its not film, its not cinema – its something new and unique”. I completely agree, and for theatre audiences to be increased in number, diversity and demographic, this distributed live experience is an essential part of the mix.

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Creative Scotland Lottery Fund Culture Sparks Rudman Consulting Arts Council England