Q. Why should I donate to CutTime’s mission?
I don’t want classical music to change.

A. The ironies of the human condition make great art meaningful. Popularizing classical music is rather ironic today, and becomes a new art form with the potential for the classical arts to truly diversify. CutTime seeds casual listeners and young musicians with lively and formative experiences. Any string quartet can begin to reset the context for classical with our examples.

Classical music could mean so much more.

We live in a fantastic age. If we are lucky enough, we can live our greatest fantasies. We not only find plenty of entertainment, sports, activities, the internet, video games, and streaming to fill all of our free time, we are also empowered to create some. This is how CutTime® came into being. The creative have become our own channels of inspiration.

Today our non-profit institutions compete directly with all of these for customers, donations and grants. While orchestras are trying cautious changes as reputable institutions, CutTime can experiment on the fly, compose deeply, or play boldly to plug classical ideas and the symphony itself into a broader world.

We are solving for replicable methods that immediately pull curious music lovers inside instrumental music (sonatas) and get them imagining ways to go deeper. When they tell us, we may then share half of these findings on this website and fully in partnership projects. Support for this enterprise is crucial, and you will appreciate our various impacts, as will the new communities we can touch.

Musicians love to read CutTime Simfonica's music at Classical Revolution events such as this one in Cincinnati in 2015.
Musicians love to read CutTime Simfonica’s music at Classical Revolution events such as this one in Cincinnati in 2015.

What do you think about this?