The way R3 counts up the hours of 'live' broadcasts seems to me a bit of a con, and I was wondering how the R3 listenership had settled or not to this distinction.
There is genuinely 'live' - as in Choral Evensong, the Monday Lunchtime recital, some Perfs on 3 evenings, the Saturday opera from the Met and on some occasions other opera houses. These very few constitute the actually live segments of the R3 week.
However, by and large, what passes as 'live' is actually and rightly billed as 'as live', i.e. NOT live, but recorded and played back later with a presenter in the studio presiding, and having it chopped up into either discrete bits and played at later dates - sometimes not even in the order of the original concert. In this way the trajectory / planning of a concert simply becomes 'commodity' or 'product', or in transmission, the material is faded in and out and interspersed with interviews / commentary of more or less - often less - serious 'expert' analysis.
What do we lose / gain by the BBC pursuing this distinction / format?
There is genuinely 'live' - as in Choral Evensong, the Monday Lunchtime recital, some Perfs on 3 evenings, the Saturday opera from the Met and on some occasions other opera houses. These very few constitute the actually live segments of the R3 week.
However, by and large, what passes as 'live' is actually and rightly billed as 'as live', i.e. NOT live, but recorded and played back later with a presenter in the studio presiding, and having it chopped up into either discrete bits and played at later dates - sometimes not even in the order of the original concert. In this way the trajectory / planning of a concert simply becomes 'commodity' or 'product', or in transmission, the material is faded in and out and interspersed with interviews / commentary of more or less - often less - serious 'expert' analysis.
What do we lose / gain by the BBC pursuing this distinction / format?
Comment