I listened to the Britten concert from the Concertgebouw on Monday and enjoyed it, particularly the Spring Symphony. It was quite an event and I see it is the subject of a separate thread. It sounded as if the audience in the hall enjoyed it too - certainly from the enthusiastic applause, or from as much of it as we were allowed to hear. Which brings me to my point - why were we not allowed to hear all of the applause until the very last clap? Instead we had......."with the applause not in any danger of ceasing any time soon, I'm going to hand you back now to John Shea in Broadcasting House in London".... and John Shea played an advert for the Aldeburgh Festival, plugged the next scheduled programme and then put on a couple of CDs to fill the gap until Night Waves at 10 pm.
I have always felt it was rude to leave the hall before the applause had ended. I remember as a young boy going to concerts with my father who pointed out the balding man in an aisle seat near the front of the stalls who got up immediately the applause begin and left. I was told he was the eminent music critic of a national newspaper (I forget which one) off to file his piece on the concert for the next day's edition. He had an excuse. The rest of stayed and showed our appreciation.
We listen to the live broadcasts instead of being there. Enthusiastic applause at the end of the concert is, for me, part of the live performance. It is not as if the BBC had to drag us away from the hall. I could understand if it were 9.59 pm and the Night Waves producer was pacing anxiously up and down. But it wasn't. We were being called out of the hall only to listen to John Shea playing CDs. We could have stayed longer and John could have played a different CD. He could have had half a dozen pieces of music lined up, all of different lengths so he was ready to play whichever of them fitted whatever gap was left.
This was not a one off. It is now the norm for Radio 3 live broadcasts. More applause please. In fact all of the applause please and make the live broadcast more of an occasion. (But Monday's was still a cracking concert.)
I have always felt it was rude to leave the hall before the applause had ended. I remember as a young boy going to concerts with my father who pointed out the balding man in an aisle seat near the front of the stalls who got up immediately the applause begin and left. I was told he was the eminent music critic of a national newspaper (I forget which one) off to file his piece on the concert for the next day's edition. He had an excuse. The rest of stayed and showed our appreciation.
We listen to the live broadcasts instead of being there. Enthusiastic applause at the end of the concert is, for me, part of the live performance. It is not as if the BBC had to drag us away from the hall. I could understand if it were 9.59 pm and the Night Waves producer was pacing anxiously up and down. But it wasn't. We were being called out of the hall only to listen to John Shea playing CDs. We could have stayed longer and John could have played a different CD. He could have had half a dozen pieces of music lined up, all of different lengths so he was ready to play whichever of them fitted whatever gap was left.
This was not a one off. It is now the norm for Radio 3 live broadcasts. More applause please. In fact all of the applause please and make the live broadcast more of an occasion. (But Monday's was still a cracking concert.)
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