Originally posted by Roger Webb
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The Eternal Breakfast Debate in a New Place
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I am warming to Tom M on Sunday Breakfast, having had it on for most of the programme.
En passant, I wonder if the shift to 'northern' voices, and (for example) letting go of Martin H is part of a deliberate policy aimed at shedding the old 'southern RP' persona, seen by the Suits as a hangover from the days of Cormac Rigby and co (more names elude me just now).
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Stop Press: Georgia Mann to appear at Glastonbury!
Edit. A dj set of 'classic' tunes according to the Express.....not as daring as the third act of Valkyrie I remember from ten or so years ago.Last edited by Roger Webb; 19-05-24, 08:36.
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Originally posted by kernelbogey View PostI am warming to Tom M on Sunday Breakfast, having had it on for most of the programme.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 french frank View Post
Nineteen separate pieces of music, and lots of single movements, in 150 minutes looks like same old, same old. I don't think even Cormac Rigby would redeem that for me. It's designed for people to mentally tune in and tune out of ("I'm sorry, what did you say, dear? Yes, I have fed the cat. What are we having for lunch?") Which is what most of R3's daily schedule is about.
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Originally posted by french frank View Post
Nineteen separate pieces of music, and lots of single movements, in 150 minutes looks like same old, same old. I don't think even Cormac Rigby would redeem that for me. It's designed for people to mentally tune in and tune out of ("I'm sorry, what did you say, dear? Yes, I have fed the cat. What are we having for lunch?") Which is what most of R3's daily schedule is about.
Have to put in a word for Tom McKinney todays presenter - a talented professional classical musician and excellent presenter who brings a whole level of experience and knowledge that very few present or indeed past presenters can match.
He is also a knowledgable ornithologist. He’s just done a nice feature on nightingales before a syrupy version of A Nightingale Sang In Berkeley Square sung by Voces 8 - a group that I managed to successfully guess by working out that they were English sounding (not Swingles ) , mixed (not Kings ) , and few in number (8?) . The point of this anecdote is to suggest that ANSIBS would never have appeared on the old R3 - even though it was partly written by a BBC producer. And that’s a big difference.
I don’t have quite the aversion to single movements that so many seem to have, if you look at how music has been performed throughout history plenty of concerts and amateur performances featured extracts. I would however like to see Afternoon concert return to complete works. That and the Lunchtime Concert was my line in the sand.
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Originally posted by kernelbogey View PostI am warming to Tom M on Sunday Breakfast, having had it on for most of the programme.
En passant, I wonder if the shift to 'northern' voices, and (for example) letting go of Martin H is part of a deliberate policy aimed at shedding the old 'southern RP' persona, seen by the Suits as a hangover from the days of Cormac Rigby and co (more names elude me just now).
I was convinced that the beautiful rendition of ANSINBS was my favourite version, by Manhattan Transfer!
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Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View PostI don’t have quite the aversion to single movements that so many seem to have.
It's not so much normal people v elitists as normal people v. an alien species which has extraordinary powers of concentration such as can hardly be imagined.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 french frank View Post
It's less an aversion to single movements as an almost total absence of anything longer than 10 minutes. Which cuts out an awful lot of classical music. I don't want a classical juke box.
It's not so much normal people v elitists as normal people v. an alien species which has extraordinary powers of concentration such as can hardly be imagined.
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Originally posted by french frank View Post
It's less an aversion to single movements as an almost total absence of anything longer than 10 minutes. Which cuts out an awful lot of classical music. I don't want a classical juke box.
It's not so much normal people v elitists as normal people v. an alien species which has extraordinary powers of concentration such as can hardly be imagined.
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And yet there’s plenty of trance music and the like that goes on for, well, hours. This issue is all about rhythm. Mechanised music and blues based progressions are now so deeply embedded in people’s subconscious that anything else is considered alien. Change is fine by me. Dehumanisation is most certainly not.
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Originally posted by muzzer View PostAnd yet there’s plenty of trance music and the like that goes on for, well, hours. This issue is all about rhythm. Mechanised music and blues based progressions are now so deeply embedded in people’s subconscious that anything else is considered alien. Change is fine by me. Dehumanisation is most certainly not.
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Was reading an article in The Guardian this morning about ultra-processed foods. "The contention of [Chris van Tulleken's] bestselling book Ultra-Processed People is that food engineered by corporations with additives and emulsifiers and modified starches essentially “hacks our brains”, disrupting the normal regulation of appetite. It tricks us into eating more by being softer, slicker, saltier, sweeter than whole foods ... "
Radio 3/Breakfast as the broadcasting equivalent of Coco Pops, using additives to persuade more and more people to consume more and more?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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