Originally posted by antongould
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now plays more short pieces
plays single movements from longer works
has more speech unrelated to the music
includes listener participation
(possibly- subjective rather than statistically objective as the data isn't available) plays individual well-known pieces more frequently
All of these things are part of what Classic FM perceived as a 'gap in the market': classical music presented in an accessible style for a broad public. Classic FM was spectacularly successful in becoming the national (single) commercial station in the UK with the largest audience.
Radio 3 wanted a cut of its success so it's tried to go down the same road, pinching Classic FM's ideas (as listed above). That some people think that Radio 3 does it a lot better than Classic FM doesn't alter that. Radio 3 should offer something that is distinctly different, not something that is similar but better.
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