Originally posted by oddoneout
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Drama to be eradicated from Radio 3
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Originally posted by LMcD View PostI can't see myself abandoning R3 altogether, but increasingly tune in to yle Klassinen during the day.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
It's an insoluble problem. If you/one/someone/a person keeps listening they are effectively endorsing the whole R3 strategy by maintaining reach. If they stop listening completely they are supporting the argument that R3 funding should be further cut as its reach decreases and the service should be further popularised. The choice is to cling on to the bits that still please you or take a stand against the wider changes. When it's apathy v action (as it often is), apathy wins
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Originally posted by LMcD View Post
That's me!
Today's afternoon schedule is an example of where I have given up on the last bits of daytime listening. I would like to hear the "Ornaments of the Baroque", but apart from the problem of not having even an approximate start time, past experience and disappointment suggests that it won't be broadcast as shown, so there is no point in sitting down to listen.
Apathy doesn't come into it, I now simply don't have the mental or physical resources to fight for/against every issue that I feel strongly about, I have to prioritise.
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Originally posted by oddoneout View Post
It's a lot of us - damned if we do, damned if we don't.
Today's afternoon schedule is an example of where I have given up on the last bits of daytime listening. I would like to hear the "Ornaments of the Baroque", but apart from the problem of not having even an approximate start time, past experience and disappointment suggests that it won't be broadcast as shown, so there is no point in sitting down to listen.
Apathy doesn't come into it, I now simply don't have the mental or physical resources to fight for/against every issue that I feel strongly about, I have to prioritise.
"Dr Laing noted that the obvious can be very difficult for people to see. This is because people are self-corrective systems. They are self-corrective against disturbance, and if the obvious is not of a kind that they can easily assimilate without internal disturbance, their self-corrective mechanisms work to side-track it, to hide it, even to the extent of shutting the eyes if necessary, or shutting off various parts of the process of perception. Disturbing information can be framed like a pearl, so that it doesn't make a nuisance of itself. This too - the premise regarding what would cause disturbance - is something which is learned and then becomes perpetuated or conserved" (Bateson, G, Conscious Purpose Versus nature, in Cooper. D. The Dialectics of Liberation, 1968, Penguin Books, Harmondsworth, 1968, P. 37).
The problem is not that solutions can't be postponed until or if they can be coped with, but that they occur unnecessarily, for systemic reasons endemic to particular political systems with inbuilt power imbalance structures: ours being exemplified in its individualising or downscaling problems those at the top solve more collectively than we might think (given the illusion they're all supposed to be competing for our support, vote etc) which they get away with by promising before not then delivering.Last edited by Serial_Apologist; Yesterday, 14:31.
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Originally posted by oddoneout View PostIt's a lot of us - damned if we do, damned if we don't.
Today's afternoon schedule is an example of where I have given up on the last bits of daytime listening.
Another Pepsi, vicar?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 pro-forma response to my complaint, for your amusement. Given the near-disappearance of drama from Radio 4 (75 of those 200 hours are The Archers) this special pleading is more than usually misleading. The "wealth of audio drama" on Radio 4 these days is risibly broke.
No sign of compromise, though, in "sharpening the focus of Radio 3 as a classical music network" - and we know exactly what they mean by that. Playlist gobbets, fewer symphonies and more Ella Fitzgerald.
Reference CAS-8005703-X5J9X6
Dear xxxx,
Thanks for contacting us with your concerns regarding changes to the schedule on Radio 3.
We’ve shared these with senior managers at Radio 3.
Given the significant financial pressures, we have to make tough decisions in every area of the BBC. As a result, we are sharpening the focus of Radio 3 as a classical music network, investing its stretched budgets in music content, both speech and performance.
The BBC will continue to be the biggest original audio drama commissioner in the UK and we are committed to the genre and to working with new and exciting writers as well as bringing a huge range of drama to new and existing audiences. We are looking at ways to increase the number of longer plays to maintain the range of creative opportunities within our audio drama offer, and we have recently increased production budgets for the genre by 10%.
From April ’25 on Sunday evenings on Radio 3 there will be a new multi-part music series, The Modernists (working title), as well as music from our New Generation Artists and the EBU.
The BBC broadcasts more than 200 hours of drama on Radio 4 each year, reaching almost 5 million listeners each week. We carefully considered our overall audience offer, including the wealth of the audio drama on Radio 4, as part of our decision.
If you’d like to understand how your complaint is handled at the BBC, you might find it helpful to watch this short film https://www.bbc.co.uk/contact/complaints. It explains the BBC’s process for responding to complaints, what to do if you aren’t happy with your response and how we share the feedback we receive.
Kind regards,
Usha Peri.
BBC Complaints Team
www.bbc.co.uk/complaints
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostThank you Master Jacques for sharing with us this "response". I can't help feeling we've seen this message before, or something very similar. One wishes Usha Peri well, in hope that "she" really exists.
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Originally posted by Master Jacques View PostThe pro-forma response to my complaint, for your amusement. [...] in "sharpening the focus of Radio 3 as a classical music network" - and we know exactly what they mean by that. Playlist gobbets, fewer symphonies and more Ella Fitzgerald.
Of course "sharpening the focus" means "aping Classic FM" - itself an accusation voiced by the Controller of Radio 3 when he was Managing Editor of Classic FM - by concentrating on light and familiar classical music. But can the upper echelons of the BBC even grasp intellectually what the evidence points to? They certainly understand the commercial issues.
The Rise and Fall of the City of Mahagonny or three hours of Essential Classics?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 oddoneout View Post
It's a lot of us - damned if we do, damned if we don't.
Today's afternoon schedule is an example of where I have given up on the last bits of daytime listening. I would like to hear the "Ornaments of the Baroque", but apart from the problem of not having even an approximate start time, past experience and disappointment suggests that it won't be broadcast as shown, so there is no point in sitting down to listen.
Apathy doesn't come into it, I now simply don't have the mental or physical resources to fight for/against every issue that I feel strongly about, I have to prioritise.
That's exactly the way I feel, word for word. Regrettable through the (insert word of your choice) of Radio 3 is, there are other matters which increasingly require, and receive, my attention,
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Originally posted by LMcD View Post[/B]
That's exactly the way I feel, word for word. Regrettable through the (insert word of your choice) of Radio 3 is, there are other matters which increasingly require, and receive, my attention,
When Radio 3, "the home of classical", has become a national laughing stock (as it has) we really have to keep pressing home this uncomfortable truth, at least on behalf of the poor saps who are still trying to make the wretched thing work, from the inside. They're the ones I feel most sorry for.
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Originally posted by Master Jacques View PostThat's precisely what The Suits rely on: the smokescreen of other national priorities allows them to play ducks and drakes with Radio 3 (and Radio 4) without causing too much outside indignation, except for a few people they can ridicule as "elitists", "luvvies" and old-school intellectuals
"‘The Third Programme offered classical music, serious drama, literature and discussion": thus spake the BBC. I have no problem with Radio 3 seeking out minor women or Black composers. But if the bulk of the music is to be by dead white males, please, let it not be The Lark Ascending, L'Isle joyeuse, Dvořák's Slavonic Dances or the Overture from Candide (played 24 times in the last year) again.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 Master Jacques View Post
That's precisely what The Suits rely on: the smokescreen of other national priorities allows them to play ducks and drakes with Radio 3 (and Radio 4) without causing too much outside indignation, except for a few people they can ridicule as "elitists", "luvvies" and old-school intellectuals. There's a lot wrong with our society, but this is one area where we really must do our best to hold the line. If we don't, who will?
When Radio 3, "the home of classical", has become a national laughing stock (as it has) we really have to keep pressing home this uncomfortable truth, at least on behalf of the poor saps who are still trying to make the wretched thing work, from the inside. They're the ones I feel most sorry for.
Thanks to the BBC, my musical menu today has included Night Tracks, to which I'm currently relaxing - yes I know - a cello concerto by Martinu and the Brahms piano trio that was a highlight of this year's Proms. I may not listen to Radio 3 as often as I did, but I wouldn't say I was apathetic.
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Originally posted by LMcD View Post
'A national laughing stock' - really?
Thanks to the BBC, my musical menu today has included Night Tracks, to which I'm currently relaxing - yes I know - a cello concerto by Martinu and the Brahms piano trio that was a highlight of this year's Proms. I may not listen to Radio 3 as often as I did, but I wouldn't say I was apathetic.
Should you have to wait until Night Tracks (22:00-23.30, so only 1.5 hours at bedtime) to hear a Martinu Cello Concerto, and a Brahms Piano Trio? Neither of them are mentioned on tonight's playlist, as far as I can see, so you couldn't even plan for it. That, in itself, is laughable for any channel, let alone one which we're told is a "jewel in the BBC crown".
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