At the end of July, the American musician, writer and storyteller Gabriel Kahane published an article in The Atlantic titled “A Love Letter to Music Listings”, in which he laments the loss of music listings in New York City. He describes the collapse of the ecosystem that once nurtured artistic discovery, with publications like Time Out, The Village Voice, and The New York Times providing detailed weekly guides. Gabriel is uncertain why listings no longer exist in the United States and pondered a solution in which performing arts institutions might work together on their own listings website.
As the largest classical music listings and reviews site in the world, we feel well qualified to answer the question and explain why the US is so badly served by specialist cultural publications. Bachtrack publishes over 30,000 classical music concerts, opera and dance events every year. We have writers around the world and publish 150 reviews a month, 1,800 a year, over 25,000 in our existence, every one edited professionally in-house.
Mainstream newspapers across the US used to have music editors, writers who wrote previews, and published lots of reviews. Over the past 15 years, music editors have become rare, and music coverage has both shortened in length and frequency. As web analytics became more common, newspapers would have analysed the number of reads each of these pieces of content received, and the numbers would have been low, because classical music is a niche interest. It's much more productive to write about artists who are already well known. Kahane describes this as the “ouroboros of cultural journalism” in his article.
They will have looked at the amount of relevant advertising dollars they receive from classical institutions and found it much lower than other sections, so they cut music coverage. And the listings which supported and went alongside the written content would have been an obvious section to axe too, saving large amounts of staff time.
So now let's look online. 90% of advertising budgets are now spent online, so you might have expected listings sites to proliferate. Although it did start to happen in the 2010s, they couldn't really take off because the music industry didn't buy into supporting them. They were focusing instead on trying to find new audiences for classical music.