Originally posted by french frank
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The Eternal Breakfast Debate in a New Place
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I sometimes feel when listening to breakfast at the weekends that music has been removed from the world. Rubbish of course. But the over-earnest veneration of silence and ‘found’ sounds seems to me to miss the point. Like so much else going on these days, black has become white, left right. I half expect the clock to chime thirteen before the news.
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Originally posted by muzzer View PostI sometimes feel when listening to breakfast at the weekends that music has been removed from the world. Rubbish of course. But the over-earnest veneration of silence and ‘found’ sounds seems to me to miss the point. Like so much else going on these days, black has become white, left right. I half expect the clock to chime thirteen before the news.
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Originally posted by muzzer View PostI half expect the clock to chime thirteen before the news.
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostMy thumbs up was merely a preference for Martin Handley. The usual Saturday morning incumbent is intolerable. Being patronised, being yelped at and being made to listen to amateur soundscapes and a mixture of muzak is a terrible thing.
On the whole I enjoy the Sounds of the Earth feature - though there was one New Zealand bird today whose 'song' was so monotonous that I was glad I didn't live there!
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Originally posted by kernelbogey View PostAs I broadly agree with Alpie, and also know that many others here do, I posted my 9157 at the moment that I discovered that I could, exceptionally, listen to Saturday's Breakfast and I thought others here might like the opportunity to as well.
On the whole I enjoy the Sounds of the Earth feature - though there was one New Zealand bird today whose 'song' was so monotonous that I was glad I didn't live there!
This was another of the birds featured https://www.doc.govt.nz/globalassets...ui-song-50.mp3 sounds like experimental flute sounds.
However monotonous some of the UK birds' calls are I would still rather have them than some of these!
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Originally posted by muzzer View PostI sometimes feel when listening to breakfast at the weekends that music has been removed from the world. Rubbish of course. But the over-earnest veneration of silence and ‘found’ sounds seems to me to miss the point. Like so much else going on these days, black has become white, left right. I half expect the clock to chime thirteen before the news.
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To hear the birdsong on a Sunday morning is pure delight. It gives one an almost inexpressible sense of calm and joy - a sense, perhaps, that however bad things may be there is always an underlying goodness waiting to be heard. I am not, in general, a fan of the new morning schedules and the vaguely neurotic hyperbole with which certain presenters introduce the music - 'I lurrv this . . . ' as one young offender never tires of telling us - but, gosh, the blackbird and the bul bul offer grace notes to our lives.
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Originally posted by Bella Kemp View PostTo hear the birdsong on a Sunday morning is pure delight. It gives one an almost inexpressible sense of calm and joy - a sense, perhaps, that however bad things may be there is always an underlying goodness waiting to be heard. I am not, in general, a fan of the new morning schedules and the vaguely neurotic hyperbole with which certain presenters introduce the music - 'I lurrv this . . . ' as one young offender never tires of telling us - but, gosh, the blackbird and the bul bul offer grace notes to our lives.
I am fortunate to be able to live in a semi-rural village, and in summer can hear cattle lowing. My end-terrace cottage with its neighbours backs onto a large area of gardens, and the Spring, Summer and Autumn days are replete with birdsong of all kinds (well, no bul bul or parakeets so far).
Many are deprived of this where they live - and even more so in the months of lockdown, as I am aware from family: my son and two grandchildren were confined during the first lockdown to their first floor London flat. Many many others are even less fortunate. I find the interweaving of natural sounds and performed music a stimulating juxtaposition. (And cf Rautavaara's Cantus Arcticus,).
And, btw, the Sunday Breakfast bells feature seems to me better than the long-running Sunday bells on Radio Four, since the focus appears to be on the musicality of the sound - rather than a nerdish interest in hearing a well-executed triple-bob-whatevs.
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Originally posted by Bella Kemp View PostTo hear the birdsong on a Sunday morning is pure delight. It gives one an almost inexpressible sense of calm and joy - a sense, perhaps, that however bad things may be there is always an underlying goodness waiting to be heard. I am not, in general, a fan of the new morning schedules and the vaguely neurotic hyperbole with which certain presenters introduce the music - 'I lurrv this . . . ' as one young offender never tires of telling us - but, gosh, the blackbird and the bul bul offer grace notes to our lives.
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Originally posted by kernelbogey View PostBeautifully put, Bella...
I am fortunate to be able to live in a semi-rural village, and in summer can hear cattle lowing. My end-terrace cottage with its neighbours backs onto a large area of gardens, and the Spring, Summer and Autumn days are replete with birdsong of all kinds (well, no bul bul or parakeets so far).
Many are deprived of this where they live - and even more so in the months of lockdown, as I am aware from family: my son and two grandchildren were confined during the first lockdown to their first floor London flat. Many many others are even less fortunate. I find the interweaving of natural sounds and performed music a stimulating juxtaposition. (And cf Rautavaara's Cantus Arcticus,).
And, btw, the Sunday Breakfast bells feature seems to me better than the long-running Sunday bells on Radio Four, since the focus appears to be on the musicality of the sound - rather than a nerdish interest in hearing a well-executed triple-bob-whatevs.
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Originally posted by Heldenleben View PostParadoxically one of the benefits of the spring lockdown was the chance to hear the urban birdsong that’s usually hidden by road roar. This was particularly noticeable in the spring early evenings not just the dawn chorus.
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