Yes, I apologise, oddoneout, for any confusion. I always look ahead one week when planning recordings, and in my excitement over a brand new Radio 3 programme (NOT!) forgot momentarily I was doing that!
Radio 3 has made much of the term 'live' meaning ' they're actually playing as you hear them; something only we can do, that you can't get from your CDs.' There was also the (purely psychological) enjoyment of feeling one was, if vicariously, actually at Wigmore Hall or wherever, in line with the old BBC anouncement ' we are now taking you over to the Royal Albert Hall' . I used to find this an added pleasure with the Queen's Hall, Edinburgh broadcasts during the Festival.
This time I suppose they mean 'recorded at concerts, rater than edited studio sessions'. To be fair, CD companies have used this meaning for some years ('Beecham live at the Proms' etc. suggests something more exciting than yet another reissue of his EMI studio recording).
Radio 3 has made much of the term 'live' meaning ' they're actually playing as you hear them; something only we can do, that you can't get from your CDs.' There was also the (purely psychological) enjoyment of feeling one was, if vicariously, actually at Wigmore Hall or wherever, in line with the old BBC anouncement ' we are now taking you over to the Royal Albert Hall' . I used to find this an added pleasure with the Queen's Hall, Edinburgh broadcasts during the Festival.
This time I suppose they mean 'recorded at concerts, rater than edited studio sessions'. To be fair, CD companies have used this meaning for some years ('Beecham live at the Proms' etc. suggests something more exciting than yet another reissue of his EMI studio recording).
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