While classical institutions usually bemoan the aging audience, Eric Whitacre’s fanbase is squarely in a prize demographic of 18-to-30 year olds. Whitacre is the most popular choral composer working today, his music performed by school choirs, university groups, and professional singers alike. The Eric Whitacre Singers, his ensemble, has just finished its first US tour.
The 43-year-old attributes his success with young listeners and singers to an active presence on social media, but it certainly helps that his sensibility is steeped in 1980s New Romantic pop. He’d still give it all up to be with Depeche Mode: “Even if they don’t need a keyboard player, they’ve got to need somebody to carry their suitcases around! I’m here.” But Whitacre is serious in his regard for their songwriting; he’s arranged the band’s hit “Enjoy the Silence” for his ensemble. “Some of these songs – they’re dated because they use ’80s synths and drum machines, but the songs themselves are poignant and genuinely moving,” he tells Kurt Andersen. “Some of my pieces, if I play them on the piano, bare bones, you can hear the influence of Depeche Mode.”
Whitacre’s most celebrated success has been online, where he’s organized a virtual choir consisting of thousands of people from all over the world contributing by video. He got the idea from a teenager in Long Island who posted on YouTube, as something of a fan letter, a video of herself singing the soprano part to his piece “Sleep.” “With the Virtual Choir,” Whitacre explains, “we’re trying as hard as we can to push the technology so that very soon I hope, we’ll be able to sing in real time,” using Skype. “My hope is that I’ll be able to pull out my iPhone 8 and start conducting Beethoven Nine, and a thousand people can join in on their lunch hour, from their phones.”
Bonus Track: “Oculi Omnium,” performed by the Eric Whitacre Singers (from the album Water Night)
Video: Virtual Choir 1 – “Lux Aurumque”
â?? Virtual Choir 2 – “Sleep”
â?? Virtual Choir 3 – “Water Night”
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