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Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View PostThe only pub I’ve ever heard Nietzsche quoted in.
On the subject of 'light' music, it's had homes in various places on Radio 3 over the years. There used to be an hour-long slot one weekday afternoon, and going further back much of 'Mainly for Pleasure' and before it 'Homeward Bound' in the early evening was like that. And of course the morning of January 1st.
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Originally posted by mopsus View Post
May I gently suggest to EH that if they want a more erudite line in overheard conversation they've been frequenting the wrong pubs? I can think of plenty (most of those in central Oxford, for example, but not just there) where that could easily happen.
On the subject of 'light' music, it's had homes in various places on Radio 3 over the years. There used to be an hour-long slot one weekday afternoon, and going further back much of 'Mainly for Pleasure' and before it 'Homeward Bound' in the early evening was like that. And of course the morning of January 1st.
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Originally posted by Roger Webb View Post
......."and Wittgenstein was a beery swine, 'I drink therefore I am.'"
PS isn’t it “ Rene Descartes was a drunken fart , I drink therefore I am”
which is comic genius …
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Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View Post
Is it pushing things to assert that the song encapsulates everything that is essentially “knowable “ of 2,000 years of Western Philosophy?
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Originally posted by oddoneout View PostI'm intrigued - I didn't set out to wind you up, so am now wondering what I wrote that has done so!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 Roger Webb View Post
it seems an increasing number of ex-Radio 3 listeners, are exploring alternatives in the shape of YLE, Cesky Rozhlas, etc. for morning listening
I relish longer works and am happy to sit for five hours (or stand, as in the 1972 Boulez Prom) for Parsifal, even though my namesake, like me, does go on a bit, but I don't need to be culturally or artistically challenged from dawn till dusk. Musical items obviously don't need to be long to be worth listening to: eg rock, jazz, folk, madrigal, early music, most of eg Chopin, Johann Strauss, Satie, Scarlatti, Mompou. Much of my favourite classical listening is 'pop-length' pieces - piano solo, Lieder, mélodies, Russian and Czech song. I have even been known to listen to individual opera arias without feeling intellectually obliged to play the whole work. I don't necessarily need a coherently constructed programme. Juxtaposition of diverse pieces can also offer pleasure, contrast, stimulation, surprise, discovery and useful insights. My personal listening pattern could not most of the time be described as planned or coherent and I sometimes just close my eyes and pick any CD off the shelf. As an oldie at home all day, I listen to Radio 3 more than I ever did when working or pre-occuped with children. Radio 3 is an essential and valued part of my listening. There are many programmes I enjoy which I do not find anywhere else, eg live Wigmore song recitals, which may be a turn-off for others - now available 24/7 with good reception and with listen again availability. One thing I won't be tuning into is Friday Night is Music Night.
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Originally posted by gurnemanz View Post
The reason why people listen to them is because they're there and very useful if a random playlist is what you seek or have the required foreign language fluency. There is an abundance of alternative sources nowadays. When I first started listening to Radio Three nearly 60 years ago you had no alternative classical radio listening, if you didn't like its style. I'm not a proponent of 'vocal vapidity' or playing extracted bits of longer whole works, so I tend not to listen when that occurs, but I don't take a hard line on that stuff and try not to be negative. I know some people who do like that style, whom I respect and who are not stupid.
I relish longer works and am happy to sit for five hours (or stand, as in the 1972 Boulez Prom) for Parsifal, even though my namesake, like me, does go on a bit, but I don't need to be culturally or artistically challenged from dawn till dusk. Musical items obviously don't need to be long to be worth listening to: eg rock, jazz, folk, madrigal, early music, most of eg Chopin, Johann Strauss, Satie, Scarlatti, Mompou. Much of my favourite classical listening is 'pop-length' pieces - piano solo, Lieder, mélodies, Russian and Czech song. I have even been known to listen to individual opera arias without feeling intellectually obliged to play the whole work. I don't necessarily need a coherently constructed programme. Juxtaposition of diverse pieces can also offer pleasure, contrast, stimulation, surprise, discovery and useful insights. My personal listening pattern could not most of the time be described as planned or coherent and I sometimes just close my eyes and pick any CD off the shelf. As an oldie at home all day, I listen to Radio 3 more than I ever did when working or pre-occuped with children. Radio 3 is an essential and valued part of my listening. There are many programmes I enjoy which I do not find anywhere else, eg live Wigmore song recitals, which may be a turn-off for others - now available 24/7 with good reception and with listen again availability. One thing I won't be tuning into is Friday Night is Music Night.
The R3 direction of travel was increasingly pushing me away from daytime listening but post April 1st that process accelerated, through a combination of ubiquitous style formats and changes to programme times, to the current situation where my total weekly listening hours are not that different from what used to be my daily hours - and are nearly all Sunday daytime. The evening concert offer may or may not increase that.
It's not the music content that has pushed me away(although repetition and lack of variety seemed to be increasing) but the waffle foam padding it now comes in.
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Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View Post
Good point it should and I’m pretty sure it is !
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Originally posted by gurnemanz View Post
The reason why people listen to them is because they're there and very useful if a random playlist is what you seek or have the required foreign language fluency. There is an abundance of alternative sources nowadays. When I first started listening to Radio Three nearly 60 years ago you had no alternative classical radio listening, if you didn't like its style. I'm not a proponent of 'vocal vapidity' or playing extracted bits of longer whole works, so I tend not to listen when that occurs, but I don't take a hard line on that stuff and try not to be negative. I know some people who do like that style, whom I respect and who are not stupid.
I relish longer works and am happy to sit for five hours (or stand, as in the 1972 Boulez Prom) for Parsifal, even though my namesake, like me, does go on a bit, but I don't need to be culturally or artistically challenged from dawn till dusk. Musical items obviously don't need to be long to be worth listening to: eg rock, jazz, folk, madrigal, early music, most of eg Chopin, Johann Strauss, Satie, Scarlatti, Mompou. Much of my favourite classical listening is 'pop-length' pieces - piano solo, Lieder, mélodies, Russian and Czech song. I have even been known to listen to individual opera arias without feeling intellectually obliged to play the whole work. I don't necessarily need a coherently constructed programme. Juxtaposition of diverse pieces can also offer pleasure, contrast, stimulation, surprise, discovery and useful insights. My personal listening pattern could not most of the time be described as planned or coherent and I sometimes just close my eyes and pick any CD off the shelf. As an oldie at home all day, I listen to Radio 3 more than I ever did when working or pre-occuped with children. Radio 3 is an essential and valued part of my listening. There are many programmes I enjoy which I do not find anywhere else, eg live Wigmore song recitals, which may be a turn-off for others - now available 24/7 with good reception and with listen again availability. One thing I won't be tuning into is Friday Night is Music Night.
I think that now Radio 3 has gone too far down the CFM route, but there are other programmes I listen too...you mentioned Wigmore Hall concerts, and I usually get lunch out of the way so as to be in my music room by One o'clock on Mondays - of course this may feature shorter pieces...you mentioned song recitals, and this is fine of course, as, usually, the whole hour is, or should be, planned as a complete entity. I mentioned WDR3's chamber concert last night, this was perfect programming - just like being at a chamber concert. But I simply don't like a 'DJ' playing odd bits of things strung together with inane chatter....but à chacun le sien!
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Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View Post
PS isn’t it “ Rene Descartes was a drunken fart , I drink therefore I am”
which is comic genius …
I actually saw a Monty Python show live in 1972....I can't remember whether they did this sketch - if they did I didn't remember it very well!
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Originally posted by Roger Webb View Post...you mentioned Wigmore Hall concerts, and I usually get lunch out of the way so as to be in my music room by One o'clock on Mondays - of course this may feature shorter pieces...you mentioned song recitals, and this is fine of course, as, usually, the whole hour is, or should be, planned as a complete entity.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 Roger Webb View Post
Yes of course! And wasn't it two Australians discussing it? University of Woolloomaloo?
I actually saw a Monty Python show live in 1972....I can't remember whether they did this sketch - if they did I didn't remember it very well!
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Originally posted by Roger Webb View PostYes of course!
“…. and Wittgenstein was a beery swine, who was just as schloshed as Schlegel”
Last edited by Nick Armstrong; 14-02-25, 19:58."...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
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