At work with the headhones on, reviewing a turgid technical specification from a supplier, but my life is spared by a piano and cello concert of the utmost beauty this lunchtime from Beethoven and Rachmaninov. Outside the sun is bright, the wind biting, and I am reminded of all that is good about Radio 3. Quite why the controller thinks that producing an "entry level" diet of superficial and familiar pap in the mornings will lead listeners towards this magnificent music is beyond me. This music may itself once have graced the mornings on Radio 3 and has now been replaced by the daily tape of the Hovis ad by Dvorak, the Onedin Line by Khachaturian, and the British Airways ad by Delibes - all great musical pieces, but just a little too regular. Great music speaks entirely for itself. It doesn't need the vulgar touch of familiarity to entice listeners to it.
Lunchtime Concert from the Wigmore Hall: Beethoven & Rachmaninov cello sonatas
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Originally posted by Domeyhead View PostAt work with the headhones on, reviewing a turgid technical specification from a supplier, but my life is spared by a piano and cello concert of the utmost beauty this lunchtime from Beethoven and Rachmaninov. Outside the sun is bright, the wind biting, and I am reminded of all that is good about Radio 3. Quite why the controller thinks that producing an "entry level" diet of superficial and familiar pap in the mornings will lead listeners towards this magnificent music is beyond me. This music may itself once have graced the mornings on Radio 3 and has now been replaced by the daily tape of the Hovis ad by Dvorak, the Onedin Line by Khachaturian, and the British Airways ad by Delibes - all great musical pieces, but just a little too regular. Great music speaks entirely for itself. It doesn't need the vulgar touch of familiarity to entice listeners to it.
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Originally posted by Domeyhead View PostAt work with the headhones on, reviewing a turgid technical specification from a supplier, but my life is spared by a piano and cello concert of the utmost beauty this lunchtime from Beethoven and Rachmaninov. Outside the sun is bright, the wind biting, and I am reminded of all that is good about Radio 3. Quite why the controller thinks that producing an "entry level" diet of superficial and familiar pap in the mornings will lead listeners towards this magnificent music is beyond me. This music may itself once have graced the mornings on Radio 3 and has now been replaced by the daily tape of the Hovis ad by Dvorak, the Onedin Line by Khachaturian, and the British Airways ad by Delibes - all great musical pieces, but just a little too regular. Great music speaks entirely for itself. It doesn't need the vulgar touch of familiarity to entice listeners to it.
A great, heartfelt paragraph, Domey.
Totally concur - including about the recital which I heard on the car radio, driving amid the sun and the swirling stiff breeze with a smile on my face. Terrific Rachmaninov.
Last edited by Nick Armstrong; 05-03-12, 16:27."...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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Osborn
It would be courteous to copy comments on the recital (suitably edited) to the Live on Radio 3 thread - that's what it's for.
(But I suspect you just want to show how supercilious you can be towards the content of the Breakfast programme, its 700,000 listeners & RW. If you want, write to the programme, identify a specific weakness & offer a well argued improvement/solution.)
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Originally posted by Domeyhead View PostAt work with the headhones on, reviewing a turgid technical specification from a supplier, but my life is spared by a piano and cello concert of the utmost beauty this lunchtime from Beethoven and Rachmaninov. Outside the sun is bright, the wind biting, and I am reminded of all that is good about Radio 3. Quite why the controller thinks that producing an "entry level" diet of superficial and familiar pap in the mornings will lead listeners towards this magnificent music is beyond me. This music may itself once have graced the mornings on Radio 3 and has now been replaced by the daily tape of the Hovis ad by Dvorak, the Onedin Line by Khachaturian, and the British Airways ad by Delibes - all great musical pieces, but just a little too regular. Great music speaks entirely for itself. It doesn't need the vulgar touch of familiarity to entice listeners to it.
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Norfolk Born
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Domeyhead
Originally posted by Osborn View PostIt would be courteous to copy comments on the recital (suitably edited) to the Live on Radio 3 thread - that's what it's for.
(But I suspect you just want to show how supercilious you can be towards the content of the Breakfast programme, its 700,000 listeners & RW. If you want, write to the programme, identify a specific weakness & offer a well argued improvement/solution.)
Your reply was a little presumptive, not to say graceless, and if you care to look in the "What's wrong with Breakfast" you will see that I started the thread with exactly what you have suggested, and those same points have been made by myself and several others no doubt, at various levels within Radio 3's hierarchy. Supercillious indeed! <snorts and harumphs in curmudgeonly manner>.
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