Originally posted by Nick Armstrong
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Radio 3 schedule changes (‘edging away from speech')
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Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View Post
God I used to love Stop The Week . The final one of the trilogy known in R4 as Pluggers , Loonies, and W**nkers.
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Originally posted by Roslynmuse View Post
There's quite a decent selection of them, mostly from the mid-80s, on YouTube - I listened to them over lockdown. Some haven't dated well, but the regulars were sharp as razorblades and Robert Robinson was brilliant as referee... (although I can't hear him now without thinking of Stephen Fry). As I was listening back to them I thought that there is very little to compare nowadays for wit and intelligence lightly worn.
Micheal Ember the producer used to get the Friday recording going with a few bottles of champagne..
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Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View Post
Indeed . Robert Robinson, Prof Laurie Taylor , Milton Shulman , Anne Leslie , Dennis Barker - a classic lineup
Micheal Ember the producer used to get the Friday recording going with a few bottles of champagne..It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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I used to listen to 'Stop the Week' every week. It was a breath of fresh air. I loved the way Robinson used to bring the discussion down to earth. They were going on about Roddy Llewellyn (the Princess Margaret's boyfriend) and his 'set' and RR said 'just a minute: do these people really exist?'
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I've just broken the habit of a lifetime (well, the habit of the past 8 or so years) and listened to an R3 programme. The concert was a recording from Wigmore Hall of Paul Lewis playing Schubert's last three sonatas. As good as I expected it to be, the young lad Handley introducing it and having a word with Paul Lewis about his programme; so, yes, I enjoyed it. But two thoughts ocurred to me:
1. This was the 'live' evening concert but in fact was a recording and was a chamber recital rather than the traditional orchestral concert. Merely an observation as from my personal point of view I would prefer a chamber recital to an orchestral concert. And a cheaper option too. But others may feel a bit deprived.
2. Taking up a point made on the RR thread about Appreciation Index scores: I was the usual R3 listener who tunes in for a particular programme that I expected to enjoy (NB that's why I listened to it) and did enjoy it. It was also the kind of 'specialist' programme which is given a high AI score by its listeners, which explains why R3 has traditionally scored well on audience appreciation relative to other stations.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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The evening concert has been a recital on many occasions , and for some reason I've often found them more memorable than orchestral concerts, for instance the Elly Ameling recital in early February 1982 has stuck in my memory. I do think they should be truly 'live', however, i.e , broadcast as it's actually being performed , rather than what they call a 'live recording'. I'm well aware that for the listener at home there's no way of telling the difference, but for some odd reason I feel more involved if I know it's atually happening there and then.
That I should say this as a lifelong enthusiast of studio recordings, most of them very old indeed to a 'millenial', shows, I think, that there must ne some mystical truth in this.
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Originally posted by french frank View PostI've just broken the habit of a lifetime (well, the habit of the past 8 or so years) and listened to an R3 programme. The concert was a recording from Wigmore Hall of Paul Lewis playing Schubert's last three sonatas. As good as I expected it to be, the young lad Handley introducing it and having a word with Paul Lewis about his programme; so, yes, I enjoyed it. But two thoughts ocurred to me:
1. This was the 'live' evening concert but in fact was a recording and was a chamber recital rather than the traditional orchestral concert. Merely an observation as from my personal point of view I would prefer a chamber recital to an orchestral concert. And a cheaper option too. But others may feel a bit deprived.
2. Taking up a point made on the RR thread about Appreciation Index scores: I was the usual R3 listener who tunes in for a particular programme that I expected to enjoy (NB that's why I listened to it) and did enjoy it. It was also the kind of 'specialist' programme which is given a high AI score by its listeners, which explains why R3 has traditionally scored well on audience appreciation relative to other stations.
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Originally posted by AuntDaisy View PostYou're now a R3 statistic - clearly attracted back by the schedule changes & ads.
I actually missed most of D958 because I only noticed the programme was on while I was looking through the schedule for something or other.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by french frank View PostI've just broken the habit of a lifetime (well, the habit of the past 8 or so years) and listened to an R3 programme. The concert was a recording from Wigmore Hall of Paul Lewis playing Schubert's last three sonatas. As good as I expected it to be, the young lad Handley introducing it and having a word with Paul Lewis about his programme; so, yes, I enjoyed it. But two thoughts ocurred to me:
1. This was the 'live' evening concert but in fact was a recording and was a chamber recital rather than the traditional orchestral concert. Merely an observation as from my personal point of view I would prefer a chamber recital to an orchestral concert. And a cheaper option too. But others may feel a bit deprived.
2. Taking up a point made on the RR thread about Appreciation Index scores: I was the usual R3 listener who tunes in for a particular programme that I expected to enjoy (NB that's why I listened to it) and did enjoy it. It was also the kind of 'specialist' programme which is given a high AI score by its listeners, which explains why R3 has traditionally scored well on audience appreciation relative to other stations.
On the AI front with R3 it depends on the music - 2nd Viennese school don’t necessarily score so well.
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Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View Post
I would love to meet the listener who “felt deprived “ listening to Paul’s utterly magnificent and compelling playing. I might advise them to take up another hobby - it just doesn’t get much better.
Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View PostOn the AI front with R3 it depends on the music - 2nd Viennese school don’t necessarily score so well.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by french frank View Post
I wasn't of course referring to this particular performance, but the general point of the loss of a slot for a traditional orchestral concert.
I would question this on the same basis. Those who choose to listen to a programme of Schoenberg and Webern may judge the excellence of the performance/presentation and their level of appreciation will be based on that. Those who don't like 'that sort of thing' won't be listening anyway. AI isn't really designed to measure what is popular.
Many years ago I did see the RI’s for Radio 3 - modern music scored badly.
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Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View PostMany years ago I did see the RI’s for Radio 3 - modern music scored badly.
AIs are principally to measure how enjoyable listeners have found a particular programme to which they themselves have chosen to listen (certainly not one which they've been asked to listen to and then report what they thought of it). As far as I know, the scores for individual programmes are never/seldom published (but can be found sometimes), but the overall scores for stations and TV channels are published. I'm looking for one set which, of the radio stations, had R3 in third place and R1 at the bottom. Just lost it. Can't remember what was top.
Just found it:
It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Appreciation Index as applied to R3 will give a completely different sort of answer to that when applied to almost any other radio or TV programme. "Did you enjoy the concert?" "Well, I thought the performance of the concerto was excellent but I much prefer X's interpretation of the symphony" is not in any way comparable to "fascinating documentary/discussion/drama". Even when a new work is being premiered, that piece is often only a part of the programme as a whole, and in any case it won't have gone through the same sort of commissioning process that a new TV drama (for example) goes through.
Is the enjoyment being measured the music itself (in which case, as has been said already, the audience will generally be self-selecting) or the performance, in which case it is irrelevant? Or, perhaps the presentation? If you enjoy watching the televised proms but hate the chat around the music how do you give an honest answer that will not mean that one's partial negativity might jeopardize the MUSIC being televised in the future?
It's a bit like asking whether you enjoyed a football match if your team has been massively defeated. "No, terrible game." "In that case we won't show any more football."
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Originally posted by french frank View Post
I assume that means AI? But again, AIs aren't designed to measure popularity or whether listeners 'enjoy' particular kinds of music. That can be measured if broadcasters are interested in finding out what is popular or unpopular ("Don't put on that 2nd Viennese stuff: people don't like it").
AIs are principally to measure how enjoyable listeners have found a particular programme to which they themselves have chosen to listen (certainly not one which they've been asked to listen to and then report what they thought of it). As far as I know, the scores for individual programmes are never/seldom published (but can be found sometimes), but the overall scores for stations and TV channels are published. I'm looking for one set which, of the radio stations, had R3 in third place and R1 at the bottom. Just lost it. Can't remember what was top.
Just found it:
https://www.statista.com/statistics/...uk-by-station/
In TV where they be always been called AI’s the holy grail is high AI , High ratings - the classic example being an Attenborough programme . Soaps tended to be high rating lower AI. I remember for years the highest AI score of the year often went to the Vienna New Years Day Concert.
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