Well i have certainly enjoiyed this 3Breakfast programme of late. Mainly because this programme has been playing a lot of brass band music!! :)
The Eternal Breakfast Debate in a New Place
Collapse
X
-
Black Swan
BBM, lucky you. I gave up this morning when I found out Clemency Burton-Hill was back tweeting, texting, etc.
Comment
-
Northender
Originally posted by LeMartinPecheur View PostReal quote? REALLY?? I'm hooked - see 'Playing with Trains' thread!!!
We could have Edward White's Puffin' Billy again! (I know it was played yesterday but that was on a Puffins theme...) New context, new meaning
Comment
-
Originally posted by Suffolkcoastal View PostShould be Honegger's Pacific 231, but that's probably a teeny bit too dissonant and scary for Breakfast. Don't want to upset the 6 month year old listeners and associated budgies and dogs do we?
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Northender View PostNo, merely a mischievous suggestion, or reasonable extrapolation, on my part, but it can only be a matter of time We've now had "Music To Build Things With Lego by", which is arguably dafter than my suggestion.I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by antongould View PostI've always been pretty sure of my place, now I'm also more or less certain of my age.
you are going the opposite way to me, I seem to get less sure of things , as time passes.I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
Comment
-
-
Anna
Did anyone hear Breakfast, cannot remember if it was Thursday or Friday. Anyway, someone tweeted in as to why classical music audiiences were so po-faced and sober and why shouldn't they laugh and show emotion. This produced a slew of texts and tweets suggesting it was ok to dance in the aisles. C-BH went along with it and even asked Rob Cowan if he would dance in the aisles.
And then I thought, this is just so Classic FM. And it's awful to let the listeners direct the programme's direction.
Comment
-
Indeed it is, Anna.
Amongst my gripes yesterday, I forgot to mention that I was also so disappointed to hear that the dreadful phone-ins were still part of the programme. I think this will be the last time I listen for a very long while, unless anyone here can persuade me that things have got better.
Comment
-
-
clive heath
The trouble is that too many of our fellow classical-music-lovers are gagging for their moment in the spotlight and the nerdy-needy presenters find their vox-pop credentials boosted by the responses to the idle chatter and has been said elsewhere they are mainly interested in their career prospects which can only be enhanced by phone-ins, tweets etc. However............some pieces of music suggested have been worthwhile, e.g. Sibelius' King Christian Suite today which could have been played with a credit to the suggestee without all the "hows the weather" nonsense.
Comment
-
Originally posted by clive heath View PostThe trouble is that too many of our fellow classical-music-lovers are gagging for their moment in the spotlight and the nerdy-needy presenters find their vox-pop credentials boosted by the responses to the idle chatter and has been said elsewhere they are mainly interested in their career prospects which can only be enhanced by phone-ins, tweets etc. However............some pieces of music suggested have been worthwhile, e.g. Sibelius' King Christian Suite today which could have been played with a credit to the suggestee without all the "hows the weather" nonsense.
"You know the people who really get on my nerves in all this? The damn fools who pander to the BBC by ringing/writing & texting their responses to the presenters who are asking for requests/entries to competitions/opinions etc etc."
As Clive says, it's not that the choice of music is necessarily poor (Puffin' Billy excluded) but it's the populist 'Hello Mum' element, teenage behaviour which - in so many ways - is spreading to the adult population.
[Add: The thing is, we don't actually know there are a lot of such listeners. How many do they need a day - half a dozen? That could be the total, which isn't many out of last quarter's 704,000 per week, say]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.
Comment
-
-
Northender
Originally posted by clive heath View PostThe trouble is that too many of our fellow classical-music-lovers are gagging for their moment in the spotlight and the nerdy-needy presenters find their vox-pop credentials boosted by the responses to the idle chatter and has been said elsewhere they are mainly interested in their career prospects which can only be enhanced by phone-ins, tweets etc. However............some pieces of music suggested have been worthwhile, e.g. Sibelius' King Christian Suite today which could have been played with a credit to the suggestee without all the "hows the weather" nonsense.
Oh yes, and I've thought of a really fun thread for listeners to weave: what is your favourite beverage when listening to a certain work or performer. Me? I like a latte with my Lahti.
Comment
Comment