Originally posted by Paul Sherratt
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The Eternal Breakfast Debate in a New Place
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Aubade
Nope. But Aubade was the name of "Breakfast" in the late 70s and early 80s. What a wonderfully Third Programme name for a breakfast show! I don't think we still got John Clare poems as interludes but I remember hearing THREE movement concertos (other than Vivaldi — don't get me started). So a question for all you cognoscenti out there.
In the late 70s (according to my great, great grandfather), R3 started at 7.00 am, But, before it started, it played a couple of tracks (as they are now known on CFM) as a sort of musical test card. They were the best possible way to wake up. But what were they? I know they were The Broadside Band but what EXACTLY were those tracks?
Can anyone help? I'm praying that the answer didn't go to hi grave with Cormac Rigby.
Cheers
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Originally posted by Aubade View PostCan anyone help?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 Aubade View PostNope. But Aubade was the name of "Breakfast" in the late 70s and early 80s. [...]In the late 70s (according to my great, great grandfather), R3 started at 7.00 am, But, before it started, it played a couple of tracks (as they are now known on CFM) as a sort of musical test card. They were the best possible way to wake up. But what were they? I know they were The Broadside Band but what EXACTLY were those tracks?[...]
There was a sort of musical test card to wake up to - music played with no announcements before the pips. The answer to their identity might be found in Humphrey Carpenter's history of Radio Three, which is a good read.
(Elsewhere on, I think, this thread I reminsced with Marthe about an east coast US station where the wonderful presenter began his morning programme with birdsong followed by one of Respighi's Ancient Airs and Dances before he uttered a word. Bliss. I guess you're not short of the birdsong, though.)
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Originally posted by Flay View PostDesperate programme this morning. He plays a chunk of Debussy's Reflets dans l’eau, then chips in as soon as it finishes telling us about texting and tweeting, not a breath of information about the piece. Where is the education in all of this? Then we have an interminable fandango, and chatting about Burns and the news (why do we need news on R3 when it is done so much better on R4?). I'm off to work, anything is better than this
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Originally posted by kernelbogey View PostWelcome, Aubade. Glad to have you, er, aboard.... Thank you for reminding us of this. All that's coming back at the moment is the theme from the Britten Young Person's Guide to the Orchestra - I think this was the prelude to Network Three which came on air at 1800 and which had a specifically educational remit, and was a precursor Radio Three.
There was a sort of musical test card to wake up to - music played with no announcements before the pips. The answer to their identity might be found in Humphrey Carpenter's history of Radio Three, which is a good read.
(Elsewhere on, I think, this thread I reminsced with Marthe about an east coast US station where the wonderful presenter began his morning programme with birdsong followed by one of Respighi's Ancient Airs and Dances before he uttered a word. Bliss. I guess you're not short of the birdsong, though.)
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The CD is a gem, Peter Holman the director was my tutor for a while 25 years ago, a nice fairly quiet spoken chap, we used to get on quite well as I was one of just a few students genuinely interested in the music he introduced to us. He bought the Parley of Instruments to Colchester, at the concert only about a dozen students turned up if I remember, what a waste.
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Originally posted by Suffolkcoastal View PostThe CD is a gem, Peter Holman the director was my tutor for a while 25 years ago, a nice fairly quiet spoken chap, we used to get on quite well as I was one of just a few students genuinely interested in the music he introduced to us. He bought the Parley of Instruments to Colchester, at the concert only about a dozen students turned up if I remember, what a waste.
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Originally posted by kernelbogey View PostPetroc has now abandoned any pretence of proper announcements and back announcements: he seems to be increasingly playing tracks without any announcement of what we are about to hear. I give up....
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Lateralthinking1
Tito Paris this morning. No one could criticise the BBC for failing to promote the genuinely excellent BBC cd "World Routes on the Road". Everywhere. Paris is from Cape Verde. That is for the first time ever to rhyme with "bird" apparently.
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