NEW YORK, NY.- The New York Philharmonic, the oldest orchestra in the United States, has long been one of the most revered. But in recent years, its musicians have been paid significantly less than their peers in Boston, Chicago, Los Angeles and elsewhere.
That will soon change. Under a new labor contract announced Thursday, the Philharmonics musicians will get a raise of 30% over the next three years, bringing the base salary to $205,000. They will be among the highest paid orchestra musicians in the country.
Its transformative, said Colin Williams, the associate principal trombone, who helped lead the negotiations. It speaks to the commitment from the Philharmonics leadership to making sure this place is really a destination orchestra.
The Philharmonics leaders praised the agreement, which the ensembles roughly 100 musicians are expected to ratify Friday, when their existing contract expires.
This is a restorative settlement that brings our musicians to the level of their peer orchestras, Deborah Borda, the Philharmonics interim leader, said in an interview.
Included in the agreement are changes meant to make the hiring process fairer and more transparent, including provisions that will require musicians to play from behind a screen in the final rounds of auditions. (A screen has been optional in the final round.)
The deal comes as the Philharmonic faces challenges at the start of its 2024-25 season. The orchestra lacks a permanent president and CEO, after the sudden resignation in July of its leader, Gary Ginstling. An investigation into sexual harassment and misconduct at the Philharmonic has dragged on. And the ensemble, which is awaiting the arrival in 2026 of star conductor Gustavo Dudamel, has no full-time music director this season or next.
The contract is the first the Philharmonic has negotiated since the coronavirus pandemic, which put financial strains on the ensemble. While the Philharmonic, with an endowment of about $237 million and a budget of about $90 million, has largely bounced back since then, it faces rising costs and a cash deficit of about $8 million.
The Philharmonic said it would pay for the wage increases, which will cost several million dollars over the next few seasons, through fundraising and other means. The orchestra said it was in the early phases of a money-raising drive called the Dudamel Visionary Fund Campaign, led by the chairs of the Philharmonics board, Peter W. May and Oscar L. Tang. Some of those funds will be used to help pay musicians salaries; the Philharmonic declined to say how much it had raised.
Borda said she was confident that the Philharmonic could afford the wage increases. Under the deal, the musicians will receive a 15% raise this season; a 7.5% raise in the 2025-26 season; and a 7.5% in the 2026-27 season.
The board would not have approved this settlement, Borda said, unless they had full confidence that there were financial and fundraising goals they could and should meet.
The contract will also bring changes to the Philharmonics highly competitive hiring process. American orchestras, including the Philharmonic, have been criticized in recent years for a striking dearth of Black and Latino players.
As part of the deal, the Philharmonic agreed to reexamine its audition process with the help of the Black Orchestral Network, Sphinx Organization and the National Alliance for Audition Support. Those groups have pushed for greater diversity in classical music.
The orchestra will also put in place protocols to ensure that votes on auditions and tenure are done by secret ballot to to eliminate any possibility of undue influence by individual committee members, according to the Philharmonic. Candidates for tenure will be paired with mentors in the orchestra to help them through the process.
Since the start of talks in April, salaries had remained the musicians priority. The base salary for the New York players was $153,504; orchestras in Boston, Chicago and Los Angeles have secured increases that will bring their base salaries to about $200,000 over the next several years.
Sara Cutler, the president and executive director of the players union, Local 802 of the American Federation of Musicians, said the agreement would enable the Philharmonic to attract and retain top musicians.
Our members deserved this raise, she said in a statement, and we are grateful to have had partners at the Philharmonic who recognized their world-class talent.
This article originally appeared in
The New York Times.