I occasionally catch the first few minutes of Classical Live, especially after Monday's Lunchtime Concert, and noticed that today's preview referred to 'performances that you won't necessarily hear anywhere else', which is a watering-down of the programme's original claim. Refences to Europe also seem to have been dropped, and today's playlist included performances recorded in (presumably South) Korea. There have also been recordings of Proms performances going back to 2011 and possibly earlier.
Classical Live is changing its tune
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I wonder what they mean by 'necessarily' in this context. It seems odd. Maybe they meant 'you might possibly have heard them on another radio channel'.
But I wonder why they make such a thing about this. After all,the BBC have been broadcasting 'performances you won't hear anywhere else' since 1922! I suppose they mean 'we don't just play CDs'. I have , though, sometimes heard on Radio 3 recordings from other countries' radio services which have been issued on CDs, e.g. some of Glenn Gould's early CBC tapes.
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Originally posted by smittims View PostI wonder what they mean by 'necessarily' in this context. It seems odd.
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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Some of the Classical Live pieces listed on the website even have references to the records they have been released on (see, for example, the last couple of tracks here). South Korea is an associate member of the European Broadcasting Union (they should have them in Eurovision like Australia - they'd probably smash it), so I'd guess the BBC are getting these performances under the same arrangement as the stuff from the big EU public service broadcasters. All much cheaper than recording concerts live in the UK, of course.
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Originally posted by LMcD View PostI occasionally catch the first few minutes of Classical Live, especially after Monday's Lunchtime Concert, and noticed that today's preview referred to 'performances that you won't necessarily hear anywhere else', which is a watering-down of the programme's original claim. Refences to Europe also seem to have been dropped, and today's playlist included performances recorded in (presumably South) Korea. There have also been recordings of Proms performances going back to 2011 and possibly earlier.
I was about to comment on a related point so your new thread is handy: I just noticed that the programme blurb promises “specially recorded music”… and was wondering what on earth that meant. Specially… as opposed to accidentally recorded?
Perhaps it means recorded just for R3 - i.e. broadcast nowhere else? I hardly think that’s always true these days.
All sounds like mildly irritating & meaningless promotional flim-flam to me"...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
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Originally posted by Nick Armstrong View Post
What was its original claim? (Yes, I haven’t been paying attention )
I was about to comment on a related point so your new thread is handy: I just noticed that the programme blurb promises “specially recorded music”… and was wondering what on earth that meant. Specially… as opposed to accidentally recorded?
Perhaps it means recorded just for R3 - i.e. broadcast nowhere else? I hardly think that’s always true these days.
All sounds like mildly irritating & meaningless promotional flim-flam to me
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This was the promo blurb/mission statement from the Media Centre- Strengthening its commitment to live and specially-recorded music, Radio 3 introduces a three-hour weekday afternoon programme from Salford, Classical Live, showcasing the best performances from the UK and beyond, recorded by the BBC and our partners in the European Broadcasting Union
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Originally posted by Nick Armstrong View Post
I just noticed that the programme blurb promises “specially recorded music”… and was wondering what on earth that meant.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
I theeenk it might mean it's a studio recording made specially to be played somewhere on R3, rather than a recorded concert."...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
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Originally posted by Nick Armstrong View Post
What was its original claim? (Yes, I haven’t been paying attention )
I was about to comment on a related point so your new thread is handy: I just noticed that the programme blurb promises “specially recorded music”… and was wondering what on earth that meant. Specially… as opposed to accidentally recorded?
Perhaps it means recorded just for R3 - i.e. broadcast nowhere else? I hardly think that’s always true these days.
All sounds like mildly irritating & meaningless promotional flim-flam to me
There was applause at the end of today's Frankfurt Radio Brass Rondo, but I guess that could have been part of a studio concert, if there is such a thing.
Recordings of performances from past Proms won't have been heard 'anywhere else' if that means somewhere other than on Radio 3 (as against somewhere other than Classics Live)..Last edited by LMcD; 21-05-24, 16:53.
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Today's Classical Live ended its lunchtime hour with a lovely performance of:
Gerald Finzi
5 Bagatelles, Op. 23
Mark Simpson (clarinet)
Richard Uttley (piano)
I admire Finzi for his wonderful melodies and his intense evocation of nostalgia. (Meanwhile in some lesser performances I'm driven to distraction by his overuse of certain harmonic thumbprints.) Mark Simpson is a fine clarinettist as well as an interesting composer and his interpretations display a searching intelligence combined with a love for a finely spun line. With Simpson one tends to forget the quality of the composition as one is so involved by his yarn
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Do other listeners agree that this was as good a performance of this piece as they have ever heard?Last edited by edashtav; 29-05-24, 18:46.
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Originally posted by edashtav View PostToday's Classical Live ended its lunchtime hour with a lovely performance of:
Gerald Finzi
5 Bagatelles, Op. 23
Mark Simpson (clarinet)
Richard Uttley (piano)
I admire Finzi for his wonderful melodies and his intense evocation of nostalgia. (Meanwhile in some lesser performances I'm driven to distraction by his overuse of certain harmonic thumbprints.) Mark Simpson is a fine clarinettist as well as an interesting composer and his interpretations display a searching intelligence combined with a love for a finely spun line. With Simpson one tends to forget the quality of the composition as one is so involved by his yarn
.
Do other listeners agree that this was as good a performance of thus piece as they have ever heard?
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Originally posted by edashtav View PostToday's Classical Live ended its lunchtime hour with a lovely performance of:
Gerald Finzi
5 Bagatelles, Op. 23
Mark Simpson (clarinet)
Richard Uttley (piano)
I admire Finzi for his wonderful melodies and his intense evocation of nostalgia. (Meanwhile in some lesser performances I'm driven to distraction by his overuse of certain harmonic thumbprints.) Mark Simpson is a fine clarinettist as well as an interesting composer and his interpretations display a searching intelligence combined with a love for a finely spun line. With Simpson one tends to forget the quality of the composition as one is so involved by his yarn
.
Do other listeners agree that this was as good a performance of thus piece as they have ever heard?
I haven't listened to a whole afternoon's broadcast since the start of the new regime; occasionally I listen to some of what comes after the Wigmore recital, but not the whole lot,and a couple of times I have turned on "on spec", but turned off after a while. Not knowing what is being played(unless I go across the room and fiddle with the controls on the black box to find the "playing now" function - which doesn't always work anyway) or how long it might last means that if I really can't stick with something I just turn it off rather than waste effort playing guessing games about how long to stay muted.
At least this wasn't a sudden change, in the way the loss of the lunchtime concert has been, as I had been listening less and less to the afternoon output anyway.
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