Oct 29 2009, 11:06AM
A Few Words About Coughing
My wife and I visited New York for several days, and this past Sunday, we went to Lincoln Center to hear Bernard Haitink conduct the London Symphony Orchestra in Mahler's Ninth Symphony. It was a wonderful concert in every way, but the experience led me -- not for the first time -- to think about coughing.
Haitink, the most dignified and self-effacing of grand old maestri, led a magnificent performance. There was a special poignancy in watching this octogenarian conduct a work so suffused with end-things. The long final Adagio especially could almost have been composed with Elisabeth Kubler-Ross in mind: its gentle, hymn-like threnody frequently gives way to passages of nostalgic bliss, of rage, of terror, of despair. And then, in the heart-breaking final bars, it lapses into a mysterious sort of serenity in which time seems to stand still, in which the music itself seems to cease even as it pares itself down to naked strings and haltingly gasps out its triple-pianissimo final cadence.
This is one of the most haunting endings in the entire symphonic literature, and Haitink judged it perfectly, producing an effect -- unique to this piece -- at once tragic and ecstatic. The final moments would have been purely exquisite, except for the sudden hacking cough that broke in from one of the boxes about ten seconds from the end.
It was far from being the first loud cough to interrupt a pianissimo phrase that afternoon. Indeed, there was a phlegmy obligato for many of the quieter passages throughout the work's 80-minute duration. Nor, of course, was the phenomenon unique to this concert; coughing during concerts and recitals, frequently during the quietest or the most delicate moments, is something with which all concert-goers have become familiar. It's the rule, not the exception. And it tends not to happen so much during climaxes and fast passages. It comes when it can do the most damage, when the mood upon which it intrudes is the most fragile.
Twice, in fact, I've seen pianists simply stop playing because of the bronchial cacophony that was interfering with their concentration. Alfred Brendel did it with a little shrug of humorous exasperation that secured the audience's sympathy; if I recall correctly, they may even have applauded the gesture. Ivo Pogorelich, on the other hand, fixed the audience with a sustained angry glare, and didn't resume playing until the room was intimidated into an almost eerie silence.
Why does this happen? I'm convinced it isn't a matter of medical necessity. I myself have never, in half a century of attending concerts, coughed while a performance was in progress. Not once, not even when I was still recovering from a cold. Neither, as far as I can recall, has anyone I've been with. And the occasions where you might most expect to hear coughing and wheezing, chamber recitals at the Wigmore Hall in London, say, or Hertz Hall on the University of California at Berkeley campus -- venues where the median age of the audience is somewhere in the neighborhood of 436 years old, and systemic health problems can safely be assumed -- are, in fact, generally the quietest.
And consider this: you don't hear much coughing in movie theaters. You may hear candy wrappers being rustled and popcorn being crunched and even villains being hissed, but not coughing.
This can't be an accident. I'm put in mind of Alan Jay Lerner's observation: "Coughing in the theater is not a respiratory ailment. It is a criticism." I think something comparable -- not identical, but similar -- is at work here. I certainly don't mean to suggest that coughing at concerts is an implicit review of the musical performance. But it may well be a symptom of inattention, boredom, and possibly even anxiety, a symptom of diffuse focus.
The cure isn't a lozenge, the cure is to listen more closely.
Photo Credit: Flick Users jordanfischer and Photocapy





Erik Tarloff
I recall reading some years ago (of course, I can't find it now) an article about research that showed that much of the coughing during performances is psychologically driven. So Mr. Tarloff's instinct matches the facts.
Now, to find the source rather than add to the disinformation campaign of the internet. If anyone wants to hunt, I vaguely recall that the researchers used time announcements and lozenges in their experiments to see it they could affect the frequency of coughing.
This is a phenomena I've also observed at orchestra concerts across North America. People are bored because they don't know how to get inside the music.
This declining state of affairs is not simply due to a poor performance or the fact that our music education is lacking. We are losing the art and practice of listening intensely.
You hardly ever see performers cough, even if they are sick. That is because they are focused and engaged in the music that they are performing. (Same thing with theater and the other performing arts.)
On the other hand, I consider myself blessed to have also experienced those rare transcendent moments in the concert hall where the intensity of the quiet material was felt by all. Nobody wanted to move or breathe for fear of breaking the spell.
If it is out of disrespect for the music, then soon, someone will stand up and yell out "FREEBIRD!!". Or does that only happen in the south?
It's not an expression of boredom, nor of inattention. On the contrary, it is a half- or fully deliberate act of stupid, hostile aggression, aimed at the performer -- the agent of the proof that there are aspects of human experience *manifestly superior* to themselves and their own petty concerns.
The cure isn't to listen more closely. It's two-fold: first, society should require every prospective audience member to pass a short but challenging written examination on the subject of classical music before gaining admission.
Second, it should enact and strictly enforce a punishment of not less than 30 days in solitary confinement in the local gaol for any commission of the act of noise-making during a performance of classical music.
Our society has allowed far too much sullen, Dubya-style slackitude with regard to the reception of serious art.
Naturally, no one would ever consider my solution, which saddens me as much as I expect it would sadden Maestro Pogorelich: he, at least, was on the right track in trying as well as he could to *intimidate* and *shame* the useless, ignorant rabble who would insist on, in essence, heckling their betters.
Benjamin Pilkington
Here here! And might I suggest we feed their children to the first violinist, perhaps as nice tartar, to ensure the proper termination of their vulgar lineage.
I'll go for the 30 days in solitude, if the performer gets the same for a missed note.
I could not agree more. There is something going horribly wrong in our concert halls. Coughing is probably the most frequent annoyance but sadly I have seen (and heard) worse. Worst ever was an elderly lady pulling out, slowly, tiny bits of cotton wool from a rustling plastic bag an stuffing them into her ears. Bizarre? Yes but, sadly, also real. And we are not talking some b-class venue here. Budapest concert hall is one of Central Europe's best, often a second stop to touring ensembles and soloists after Vienna. Or, horror of horrors, in the same venue, a group of people starting to comment loudly on the stage design and choreography in the middle of the ride of Valkyries, while the orchestra is giving it their best playing like they would play for Solty in a recording session. And probably the worst ever, a mobile phone that rang in the Konzerthaus in Vienna spoiling Fazil Say’s wonderful interpretation of Bach. Do I just have a bad luck? I don’t think so. Audiences are increasingly unsophisticated, but by sophistication I don’t mean snobbery, their crudeness and rudeness is precisely a manifestation of snobbery as they go to concerts for it's something "that sophisticated people do", almost out of obligation. Unable to concentrate and unable to admit their boredom and walk away they fidget in their seats feeling awkward, and they cough.... at best. And yet I'll try to persevere and seek out live performances for they can never be replaces by the reclusive enjoyment of recordings, or at least that will be my view until my next shocking concert hall experience. As a side note, the phenomenon is actually not that new, some live recordings document that coughing was rife even decades ago, Gould’s live performance of Brahm’s first piano concerto with NY Philharmonics under Bernstein serves as a good example. No wonder he gave up on giving public performances....
If I were allowed to tape the four BSO Chamber Orchestra concerts I go to yearly, I could prove that coughing is voluntary because people there seem to SAVE their coughs for the moments between movements. As soon as a movement ends, the coughing begins, until the players resume with their playing. It is infuriating. If they can hold it to the end of the movement then they can hold it, period.
If one is so sick that one is compelled to cough (and it does happen) one should stay home.
I attended a symphony concert in Tokyo some years ago. The programme featured just the one piece, Bruckner's 85-minute Eighth Symphony, and it was a full house. There was not a single cough during the entire performance. It can be done, it's only a question of attitude.
Geesh, louise. I'm glad I don't think ya'll are representative of classical concert-goers or classical musicians. What a judgmental, non-compassionate clutch of comments (specifically excluding DBN and Paul). By all means, lets limit concert goers to those who pass your challenging entry exam and professional musicians to those who never miss a note -- think of the money to be saved when building such teeny tiny concert halls . . .
There are many reasons folks cough at live performances. MOST people try very hard not to cough or otherwise "make noise" during concerts. That very effort can make it harder to restrain a cough. Of course distracting noises should be discouraged. But a little compassion for inevitable human lapses will help counteract the appearance that "serious" art is reserved for smug and effete prigs.
If you don't want to be bothered by real people participating in your musical experience, buy a really great sound system and stay home. Otherwise, accept the messy experience of the real world. And, by the way, may concert goers never adopt the practices of movie goer. Movie patrons may not cough much, but they seem frequently to have long, loud, extraneous conversation directly behind me.
carolfb,
You are missing the point about coughing at concerts. It doesn't happen throughout the evening at random, evenly spaced intervals. It doesn't happen very much when the orchestra is revving up and playing loudly, or something "exciting" is happening.
Coughing occurs most often during the quiet bits. This is also true of program flicking, candy unwrapping, and purse contents rearranging.
I don't mind if people clap between movements or make other appreciative sounds because they are engaged with the music. Mozart had to contend with that and even invited such a response. (In Prague for example, he knew that certain 2nd themes would be audibly appreciated while the music was playing.)
The problem with psychological coughing epidemics is that they destroy the possibility of someone else having a transcendent musical experience -- something that doesn't come around as often as we would like.
The LA Phil provides free Halls, an otherwise unknown throat remedy. But while it quiets coughing, there is often a vapor cloud of menthol wafting over the crowd, yet another mood-destroyer unless one feels that menthol is an appropriate accompaniment to the contemplation of death.
Spot on, Mr. Tarloff. And now please address bracelets and crinkly wrappers.