That's it boys, white people are getting removed from this reality. First, google erase whites when you type "white men, white women", "european white art" "american inventors" and now the french state is banning classical music in a public owned music room in place, they want to play "actual music" (rap, hip hop, jazz) aka "black music"
"La programmation ainsi définie exclut tout concert ou spectacle de musique classique quel qu'en soit la forme (concert symphonique, récital, musique de chambre, opéra, etc.) y compris dans le cadre de manifestations à vocation commerciale ou de manifestations à vocation non commerciale (mécénat, soirée de bienfaisance, etc.)"
"The programmation, exclude all classical music concert or classical show whatever the form (symphony, recital, chamber music, opera"
The room was renowed because it hosted the Paris Orchestra.
Retarded OP, it's so Pleyel doesn't go into direct concurrence with Philharmonie de Paris.
Jaxon Miller
3-4 taffe de hash + classique = magnifique essayez
Eli Parker
For the Anglo who aren't aware of what Pleyel is, this THE sanctuary of classical music in France. And our government wasted dozens of milions to rebuild Pleyel and MAKE IT UNABLE TO PLAY CLASSICAL MUSIC.
Ian Hughes
Globalist, liberal push. Push back.
Bentley Myers
>Salle Pleyel >center of paris >center of tourism >near the arc de triomphe >blend in the paris architecture
>Philharmonie de Paris >Worst part of paris, full of niggers and muslims >Near what the amerifats called the "no-go zone" >New shitty type of ((((architecture)))) >OY VEY NOBODY GO LISTEN TO CLASSICAL GOYS
Sure sure goyim.
Pic related, the Philharmonie de Paris
Adrian Diaz
I'm sick of this.
Ian Mitchell
No, it's just the (((owners))) of various concert halls deciding among themselves and then lobbying to maximize the profit in a certain room (because classical concerts do not bring in significant money while contemporary music does) and avoid two venues competing with each other. It still sucks.
Jaxson Cooper
Your government is very totalitarian France, democracy has been dead for a long time in your coutnry.
Ethan Torres
There was never any democracy in France m8
Free masons are in power since 1789
Jonathan Jackson
humans are reactionary and go for counter cultures. They're pushing this stuff so hard to drive people to the polar opposite of what they're currently doing.
It's like reverse psychology you stupid muslim.
It's the only way to get whites back on track again.
Lucas Reed
The fuck. Source?
Andrew Perry
What, exactly, causes a country to hate itself so much?
Juan Green
>Muh luminatis!
Just face the fact that your revolutions failed because French people have a deep desire to be controlled by the state.
Benjamin Diaz
I get the feeling they do this on puropse to get a civil war. All this shit really increased in speed in the last 12 month... like greatly increased. wtf man.
James Hughes
Nothing is worse that post modern architecture
Mason Howard
imo you had a chance during Gaulist years and the decade after, y'all fucked that up by clinging to socialism.
Joseph Reyes
stupid fucken idiots think they can recover
Logan Smith
Well...shit. I...damn man, the suicidal indoctrination really took a toll this time!
It's a ban in a specific romm, owned by the state. This place was renowed because it was were the Paris Orchestra played.
Camden Hernandez
Nope
Free masonery was banned during Vichy but De Gaulle re-authorized it. Most french see him as some sort of Messiah but he did a lot of shit.
Jeremiah Reed
As if any of you plebs ever listen to classical music or went to a classical concert
Evan Adams
Fucking this. The best way to avoid having to deal with that sort of thing is making the music (or other artform because it does not just apply to "classical music") more interesting. Getting it out of its prohibiting prices would be a first step. Because as of right now, the few concerts that are affordable and don't get sold out at insane prices (with all seats sold to the same parisian elite) are students from the local conservatory playing at loss in small rooms that are not concert halls in the first place.
Gavin Gomez
the "revolution" was led by powerful rich people that wanted to have the power, they're as totalitarian as kings were, nothing really changed in 1789.
Landon Cook
what are you trying to say ivan?
Andrew Clark
Justin, c'est toi?
Leo Morales
Sure m8
it isn't like the french politicians are meeting the free masons to beg them for the post of President
If you're under 30, you can get tickets to most classical concerts for next to nothing. And the 'expensive' tickets are often cheaper than what people pay to go to football matches, yet no one excuses football of being elitist.
>If you're under 30, you can get tickets to most classical concerts for next to nothing. Unless it's in some specific rooms or venues. And what a coincidence, it's the venues that get the tightest schedules with the best program. Yes there are loads of small concerts you can go to for just a couple bucks, but you'll have to like taking your car to go to bumfuck-nowhere to hear a choir give their recital in the local church, or again have some of the local musicology students play in a room with terrible sound, etc. I've been to these and while the initiative is great, the quality often isn't. As for football, plebs gonna plebs I suppose. Some folks have weird priorities.
Adrian Nelson
can you viva la revolution please?
Grayson Johnson
I do. I should go agan soon, thx for reminding me.
retard
Nathan Morris
Maybe it's vastly different in France, but from my experience of concerts in the UK, Italy and Germany, there are young-people tickets available for no more than about £20 (often less than £10). And I'm not talking about amateur recitals or orchestras, I'm talking about professional orchestras/opera companies/ performers.
The argument that classical music is overpriced is one I often see thrown about by people who have never actually thought about attending a classical concert so are just talking based on stereotypes and their own preconceived biases. You seem to know what you're talking about so maybe things are different in France, but in my experience the arguments against classical music as an elitist and expensive art form don't reflect the current situation.
Joshua Mitchell
These tickets do exist but for halls that have limited seatings and performances that require reservations, there will only be a very limited number of these. And you can be sure they will be bought by students at the conservatory or musicology department (and why wouldn't they get them, really?) in at most one day or two. That's the issue deep down. Our cultural life relies far too much on regional subsidies which creates a divide between smaller artists and widely recognized ones. The first group will always do a very small living off small performances, will hardly get what would be required to record and publish anything without pulling a lot of strings, and constantly have to pull from their own ressources to try and expand. The second group gets caught in its own loop of valorization and can live off performances without subsides because the name recognition itself can cover expanses. That means inflating the prices of the performance, etc. That divide exists in all genres, and sadly there is very little transition from the first group to the second, and the difference between both is huge not necessarly in artistic terms, but in terms of logistics, etc. That reliance on subsidies is a huge issue for culture because it keeps it alive on a small scale but cannot expand due to the lack of money. Sure it can finance small conderts but it can only maintain a few orchestras per region. Sure it can finance a 48h-movie competition but it cannot back a bigger production that would get on the level of an american indie film, etc. The problem is well known and it wouldn't be as huge if there were not years long waiting lists for regional funding, or if private funds did not first ask you to be validated for regional funding to then help you. We tried to protect our local culture and it did work when we still had a growing economy but now it is slowly killing it.