Originally posted by oddoneout
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Drama to be eradicated from Radio 3
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Originally posted by smittims View PostI think he meant the one per cent to be his book '1975, 1984 minus nine' (Dobson publications), which I still turn to occasionally with pleasure . It includes, surprisingly for me, a lengthy chapter on Association Football, and some lovely inky drawings by his wife,the artist Milein Cosman.
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I think he meant the one per cent to be his book '1975, 1984 minus nine' (Dobson publications), which I still turn to occasionaly with pleasure . It includes, surprisingly for me, a lengthy chapter on Association Football, and some lovely inky drawings byhis wife,the artist Milein Cosman.
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Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View PostI’m coming round to the Hans Keller view that 99 per cent of words about music are a waste of time ..,
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It is encouraging that the numbers are steadily increasing on this poll. Gatsby in Harlem was incredibly good, but if you google Drama on 3 you will find so many similar treasures. In a world where the liberal foundations are under such huge pressure, it is so important that these anchors - however frail - are kept in place. Everything helps.
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Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View PostI’m coming round to the Hans Keller view that 99 per cent of words about music are a waste of time ..,
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Originally posted by french frank View Post
Some people's 'evaluations' might be more searching and discerning than those of others, depending on their backgroundI have neither the personal knowledge nor the interest to evaluate how 'Soft Machine' (who they?) or Pet Shops Boys or Florence and the Machine rate musically so as to have attracted the attention of better musical minds than mine!
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View Post
Wouldn't one say evaluating the "known" is due part and parcel of the open scientific principle?I have neither the personal knowledge nor the interest to evaluate how 'Soft Machine' (who they?) or Pet Shops Boys or Florence and the Machine rate musically so as to have attracted the attention of better musical minds than mine!
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Originally posted by Master Jacques View PostYou must know a different cross-section from many of the ethno-musicologists I've encountered, who tend to be very imperious about the qualitative superiority of "their" areas of study to (a completely fictitious) elitist, white-male and monolithic Western tradition.
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Originally posted by french frank View PostTheir attention was attracted to certain pop music composers and works. What stood out, as far as they were concerned, was of particular interest, not the genre per se but what it might produce.
Like Paul McCartney, significant in his time and in the context in which he worked/lived. It's lesser intellects and those with a narrower education, who evaluate the known and are uncuriously ignorant of the unknown who get more attention than they deserve..
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Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View PostAbsurd or not it attracted considerable musical intellects like Hans Keller and Prof Wilfrid Mellers.
Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View PostNow , according to the endless trails , we have Radio Four series on great thinkers like Malcom X. A very significant figure no doubt but a great thinker?
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Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View PostAnd then there’s the vast sphere of ethno-musicology studying music of the various peoples of the world. It’s often struck me how very “unstuck up” musicologists are about their work.
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Originally posted by smittims View PostI moved from pop to classical at the age of thirteen, and ever afterwards couldn't separate pop (or 'rock' as it later came to dignify itself) from immaturity . The sight of middle aged men avidly listening to it and describing it in the language I associated with Bach and Wagner's masterpieces seemed absurd to me.
And then there’s the vast sphere of ethno-musicology studying music of the various peoples of the world. It’s often struck me how very “unstuck up” musicologists are about their work. In English literature there’s a real hierarchy of interest - or used to be - about what’s worth studying. All this of course academic theorising would have been par for the course on R3 in the ‘80’s . Now any such programme would have to be so dumbed down as barely worth listening to.
Now , according to the endless trails , we have Radio Four series on great thinkers like Malcom X. A very significant figure no doubt but a great thinker?
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