Radio 3 have really gone overboard on 'arrangements' recently. We had that accordion chap playing Faure and Schubert, of all composers. After hearing 'Lydia' mangled in this way I had to put on Pierre Bernac and Francis Poulenc's version to convince ,myself that there was still civilisation.
"Classical Live" was once Afternoon Concert
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Originally posted by smittims View PostRadio 3 have really gone overboard on 'arrangements' recently. We had that accordion chap playing Faure and Schubert, of all composers. After hearing 'Lydia' mangled in this way I had to put on Pierre Bernac and Francis Poulenc's version to convince ,myself that there was still civilisation.
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Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View PostAny way neither the Saint-Saens nor the Beethoven gain much from being taken out of context. The thrilling tonal movement key scheme of the 7th symphony - 1 Cmajor / A major. - 2 Aminor/ A major -3 Fmajor / D major -4 A major just undermined by single movement extraction.
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Originally posted by Retune View PostThe worst I recall was hearing the first movement of the Op.101 piano sonata and, thinking I was safely in the Through the Night zone where whole pieces are played, expected to enjoy the second. But no, this was one of those days before the schedule change when Through the Night started later, so I was 'treated' to a random piece of Respighi. The whole sonata is not much over 20 minutes. Is there really anyone in the entire R3 audience able to appreciate the Beethoven who would genuinely have enjoyed such a jarring juxtaposition, making the first movement meaningless? Who are they doing this for? Dothe people who compile the playlists, who must have a broad knowledge of the repertoire and presumably enjoy the music, ever listen to these programmes themselves?
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Originally posted by Retune View PostThe worst I recall was hearing the first movement of the Op.101 piano sonata and, thinking I was safely in the Through the Night zone where whole pieces are played, expected to enjoy the second. But no, this was one of those days before the schedule change when Through the Night started later, so I was 'treated' to a random piece of Respighi. The whole sonata is not much over 20 minutes. Is there really anyone in the entire R3 audience able to appreciate the Beethoven who would genuinely have enjoyed such a jarring juxtaposition, making the first movement meaningless? Who are they doing this for? Do the people who compile the playlists, who must have a broad knowledge of the repertoire and presumably enjoy the music, ever listen to these programmes themselves?
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Originally posted by LMcD View Post
You're absolutely spot on, my friend! Wary newcomers are clearly more important than weary regulars.
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Originally posted by oddoneout View Post
But does it serve wary newcomers either? This is always the great unanswered question. Looking at the result of the BBCS concert deconstruction I can only assume that it has been determined that wary listeners are not affected by having completely unrelated items(style, mood, key) thrown together at random, with the occasional constipation of a whole symphony. I would have thought that sort of mishmash would be rather hard to cope with for those used to easy listening CFM style, if that is part of the new audience the Beeb is aiming for, even if it is assumed that they will only listen to part rather than the whole.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View Post
But can the whole be understood or even appreciated by the listening novice through the part? Composers have not necessarily composed their symphony, whatever, to be listened to in that way. It's like being expected to understand Christianity by reading a random chapter from the Bible. Is that what Radio 3's informative remit should be about? If so it's giving false pictures. That is the nub of the issue, I think.
The thing I find unpleasant is that it seems to take the same superior "we know best what the ignorant masses should have" that results in watered down science-based TV programmes or superficial news reportage. Simplifying explanations or material to reach a wider audience does not mean having to turn it into the equivalent of weaning food administered by nanny.
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This blog article, dated 1st Aug this year, has an interesting graph that uses Rajar data. It shows that the number of R3's listeners has stayed more or less the same since the turn of the century, fluctuating between 1.7m to 2.1m. The latest figure is almost the same as 1999's. One might question the effectiveness of the many changes that R3 has undergone. Was the remit to attract new listeners ultimately successful? If not, what was the point? If yes, what happened to the established audience? Have both station and listeners changed at the same time?
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Originally posted by Hitch View PostThis blog article, dated 1st Aug this year, has an interesting graph that uses Rajar data. It shows that the number of R3's listeners has stayed more or less the same since the turn of the century, fluctuating between 1.7m to 2.1m. The latest figure is almost the same as 1999's. One might question the effectiveness of the many changes that R3 has undergone. Was the remit to attract new listeners ultimately successful? If not, what was the point? If yes, what happened to the established audience? Have both station and listeners changed at the same time?
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Originally posted by Hitch View PostThis blog article, dated 1st Aug this year, has an interesting graph that uses Rajar data. It shows that the number of R3's listeners has stayed more or less the same since the turn of the century, fluctuating between 1.7m to 2.1m. The latest figure is almost the same as 1999's.
The question is whether R3 makes strategy changes in response to poor listening figures, or whether strategy changes cause listening figures to fall.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
But the population has grown (by 21%?). Between 1999 and 2024 (the listening figures are not directly comparable btw), Radio 2's audience has grown from 9.7m to 13.3m. R3's went from 2.3m to 1.8m (all figures rounded).
The question is whether R3 makes strategy changes in response to poor listening figures, or whether strategy changes cause listening figures to fall.
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