Originally posted by smittims
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Originally posted by LMcD View PostBroadly speaking, isn't that what it's doing most of the time? I don't think a 90-minute concert of 'light' music (which is not a derogatory term in my book) on a Friday evening means that the station is failing in its principal mission,
BUT (and I realise this) it depends how you 'consume' music. For me, listening to music is for quality time. An hour, a couple of hours of listening to chosen music is what it's about. I don't want music on all the time. Other people do want music on all the time. Welcome to Radio 3.
Off the cuff: I would reserve that type of programming to Breakfast only. Private Passions would also have a place (1 hour) though I wouldn't listen to it. CotW would ideally be at 9am, if not at 12 pm. 10am would be a programme such as CD Masters or the old Morning Performance (mostly 'live' chamber music from festivals). These would fill the morning until the Lunchtime Concert. The afternoon would be a 'concert' of longer pieces, all announced in advance, until 'drivetime' (Breakfast and In Tune would be mere concessions to how things are ). The concert from 7.30 - 9.00 would be a concert, announced in advance. These would be followed by speech programmes of the Essay/Night Waves type (Free Thinking as a title strikes me as pretentious). TTN. Jazz/world programming to be fitted in where those listeners would like to hear them. Weekends would be different. Dream on, sweet prince.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 wouldn't be averse to a weekly programme dedicated to "Light Music" as long as it took a scholarly approach. Concentrate on one composer or on works written for a specific reason: newsreels, Pathé documentaries, soundtracks, public information films, concert parties, civic occasions, etc.. I imagine there are plenty of British composers and foreign equivalents to explore. Goodness knows how many fanfares, songs and suites are gathering dust somewhere. Done with a purpose, such a show might even "inform, educate and entertain"...
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Originally posted by french frank View Post
I don't know that anyone wants to 'knock' anything, especially for being popular. But these discussions usually end up with someone saying, 'Whether it should be on R3 is another matter'. But that is what 'matters'. Whether a programme is good, bad, liked, disliked and so on is 'another matter'.
I would say that Radio 3 has a duty to feature great composers and lesser (even indifferent) composers, major works and minor works, works so little known that no one has any opinion about them one way or the other. So it seems not unreasonable to suggest the station should stay broadly within its specialist music areas of classical, jazz and world music. Extending the range of music just to attract more listeners is a cheap marketing ploy.
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Originally posted by Hitch View PostI wouldn't be averse to a weekly programme dedicated to "Light Music" as long as it took a scholarly approach. Concentrate on one composer or on works written for a specific reason: newsreels, Pathé documentaries, soundtracks, public information films, concert parties, civic occasions, etc.. I imagine there are plenty of British composers and foreign equivalents to explore. Goodness knows how many fanfares, songs and suites are gathering dust somewhere. Done with a purpose, such a show might even "inform, educate and entertain"...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 Hitch View PostI quite agree. I've always thought that R3 should be the BBC's flagship radio station; it has to shoulder a thousand years of music. An on-air Grove Dictionary with personable but discreet presentation, please.
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Originally posted by Hitch View PostI wouldn't be averse to a weekly programme dedicated to "Light Music" as long as it took a scholarly approach. Concentrate on one composer or on works written for a specific reason: newsreels, Pathé documentaries, soundtracks, public information films, concert parties, civic occasions, etc.. I imagine there are plenty of British composers and foreign equivalents to explore. Goodness knows how many fanfares, songs and suites are gathering dust somewhere. Done with a purpose, such a show might even "inform, educate and entertain"...
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Originally posted by Hitch View PostI wouldn't be averse to a weekly programme dedicated to "Light Music" as long as it took a scholarly approach. Concentrate on one composer or on works written for a specific reason: newsreels, Pathé documentaries, soundtracks, public information films, concert parties, civic occasions, etc.. I imagine there are plenty of British composers and foreign equivalents to explore. Goodness knows how many fanfares, songs and suites are gathering dust somewhere. Done with a purpose, such a show might even "inform, educate and entertain"...
In more recent years (9 or 10 maybe?) there was the 'Light Fantastic' series which wasn't anything like as scholarly. I recall a discussion session with Tom Service chairing it (say no more..). There was a lot of hand-wringing about why we don't hear more of this music and I thought well, it's in the gift of the BBC to broadcast it but they choose not to, having dropped Brian Kay's regular light music programme.
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Originally posted by hmvman View PostThere was a lot of hand-wringing about why we don't hear more of this music and I thought well, it's in the gift of the BBC to broadcast it but they choose not to, having dropped Brian Kay's regular light music programme.
For all the changes to Radio 3 over the past 25 years, I can't think of any new programme (CD Masters, alone?) designed to appeal to serious classical music enthusiasts; by this I mean serious, knowledgeable (or aspiring thereto!) listeners, not listeners to something called 'serious music'. It's been all about attracting new listeners, easing new listeners into classical music, broadening the scope of music beyond Radio 3's range. All well and good, but who loses out every time?
With some facelifts: Record Review, This Week's Composer/Composer of the Week and Music In Our Time/the New Music Show all date back to medieval times; Music Restored/the Early Music Show has been on for over 30 years. The less long-lived CD Masters came and went. Of the current programmes I don't know about SM-P's Music Map. Anything else new? The standard concerts and recitals seem to be much fewer now.
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...
For all the changes to Radio 3 over the past 25 years, I can't think of any new programme (CD Masters, alone?) designed to appeal to serious classical music enthusiasts; by this I mean serious, knowledgeable (or aspiring thereto!) listeners, not listeners to something called 'serious music'....
...Music Restored/the Early Music Show has been on for over 30 years. The less long-lived CD Masters came and went. Of the current programmes I don't know about SM-P's Music Map....
Today's EMS was more in the style of the old Music Restored, i.e. an interesting concert with explanatory interludes.
I've tried to listen to Music Map, but still prefer the old Discovering Music approach, it seems more focussed.
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I tried Music Map a couple of times in the faint hope it would live up to its blurb, even if only in part, but, as with Inside Music previously I was disappointed. Shan't try again. What I find particularly annoying is that is is obviously a management decision to produce a second-rate programme, since CotW and EMS still show how it should be done, and R3 has suitable people to deliver - if they are allowed to use their skills and knowledge, which they so evidently aren't.
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Originally posted by oddoneout View Post
I tried Music Map a couple of times in the faint hope it would live up to its blurb, even if only in part, but, as with Inside Music previously I was disappointed. Shan't try again. What I find particularly annoying is that is is obviously a management decision to produce a second-rate programme, since CotW and EMS still show how it should be done, and R3 has suitable people to deliver - if they are allowed to use their skills and knowledge, which they so evidently aren't.
I don’t think any one sets out to make a second rate programme particularly Sara M-P who is an excellent presenter.
The problem is deeper than that and lies in what the producers perceive the audience to be and the perceived level of understanding of that audience. You rarely hear even such basic concepts as first subject, second subject , development and modulation mentioned these days and very little on how music is embedded in the contemporary culture of the 17th, 18th and 19th centuries.
All very surprising as TV programmes like Springwatch regularly mention more complex concepts like separation feeding, evolutionary niches , and eutrophication complete with a quick explanation. I suspect that the producers’ perception is that sort of approach would put listeners off - well it doesn’t with Springwatch which has a vastly higher audience.
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