Despite widespread student frustration at the last-minute cancellation
of the Wyclef Jean concert earlier this month, only two members of the
general student body attended an open meeting to discuss the
cancellation.
The meeting was the first “town hall discussion” held by the
Fall 2005 Concert Inquiry Commission, an Undergraduate Council (UC)
committee charged with investigating the failures that led to the
cancellation.
Although the meeting was widely advertised on House e-mail
lists, the audience was almost entirely composed of members of the UC
and Harvard Concert Commission (HCC).
Several days before the planned Nov. 6 concert, the HCC
canceled the show due to insufficient ticket sales. According to HCC
Chair Jack P. McCambridge ’06, the cancellation cost the commission
between $25,000 and $30,000.
Despite the low public attendance, the town hall’s organizers characterized the discussion as a productive one.
“I would have liked to have seen attendance a bit higher,” said
Matthew R. Greenfield ’08, a commission member and one of the sponsors
of the bill that created the commission. “On the whole, it was a
productive conversation about concerts in general.”
Without constituents to consult, UC and HCC members offered their own speculation for what went wrong.
Some said Wyclef was a poor choice.
“I just felt like there weren’t enough people on this campus
passionate enough to go to a concert just because it was Wyclef,” said
John F. Voith III ’07, chair of the UC’s Campus Life Committee.
One UC member criticized the way the HCC carried out its operations.
“I felt like one of the main problems [was] that we were
publicizing it with posters and t-shirts,” Samson F. Ayele ’09 said of
the concert. “The way to really power out tickets is to get people
personally involved in the selling of tickets.”
Some participants at the meeting suggested that the HCC focus
on one bigger name show a year, rather than one a semester. McCambridge
argued that this type of schedule would carry a large financial risk.
After last night’s town hall, Greenfield vowed that the
Inquiry Commission would continue its efforts to solicit student
opinion.
“We will certainly keep trying to reach out to students,”
Greenfield said. “I think members of the UC could probably go to their
constituents and come back to a UC meeting and say this is what my
constituents, my neighbors said. This is why my constituents didn’t buy
tickets.”
The Inquiry Commission is scheduled to deliver its report when the full council meets this Sunday.
“We will have a set of recommendations for the council on
Sunday,” said Greenfield. “We’ll have a report that will be pretty
comprehensive. If we can just bring to the council a more thorough
understanding of how the process worked, then we will have done our
job.”
—Staff writer Alexander D. Blankfein can be reached at ablankf@fas.harvard.edu
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