Originally posted by Cockney Sparrow
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Classical Live is changing its tune
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Originally posted by vinteuil View Post
... o, that resonates! - I missed a chance or two to settle permanently in France in the 1990s : things have moved on; too late now, and I'm happy where I am - but lordy! I still have regrets... (and of course, without Brexit, wd still have the possibility of living both here and there . )
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Sorry to have diverted from the thread!
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Originally posted by MickyD View Post
Where would you have settled, Vints? It's now about 33 years since I've been in France and still very happy. Got my citizenship in 2018. I was watching various British people talking on a Channel 4 'lifestyle' programme the other day and was rather alarmed to see that I sometimes had difficulty in understanding what Brits were saying - not so much pronunciation but the meaning behind certain expressions. That's when I realise I have been away a long time, I guess. I've now spent more time of my life in France than in the UK, which is an odd thought. I sometimes think I now feel more French than British.
Sorry to have diverted from the thread!
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Originally posted by MickyD View PostWhere would you have settled?
Originally posted by MickyD View PostSorry to have diverted from the thread!
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Originally posted by vinteuil View Post
... o, many fantasies / thought experiments over the years : including - Avallon, Moulins, Bourg-en-Bresse, Cavaillon, Cabris, Nantes, Poitiers, Villefranche-de-Rouergue, Toulouse, Aubenas... And there's always Paris
sorry again...
I was once told that I had a 'ridiculously romantic' view of Paris by somebody who'd just returned to the UK after working there for a while.
Getting back to 'Classical Live', I've noticed a steady increase in the use of performances from the BBC archives that were first broadcast anything up to25 years ago, so they're clearly not going to have any trouble filling the 3 hours for the foreseeable future.
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Originally posted by LMcD View Post
I was once told that I had a 'ridiculously romantic' view of Paris by somebody who'd just returned to the UK after working there for a while.
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Originally posted by LMcD View Post
Given the way things have gone, and are still going, in this country of late, I don't think anybody will mind a brief touch of the 'if onlys' . I've always had a bit of a thing about Sarlat.
I was once told that I had a 'ridiculously romantic' view of Paris by somebody who'd just returned to the UK after working there for a while.
Getting back to 'Classical Live', I've noticed a steady increase in the use of performances from the BBC archives that were first broadcast anything up to25 years ago, so they're clearly not going to have any trouble filling the 3 hours for the foreseeable future.
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Originally posted by LMcD View Post
Given the way things have gone, and are still going, in this country of late, I don't think anybody will mind a brief touch of the 'if onlys' . I've always had a bit of a thing about Sarlat.
I was once told that I had a 'ridiculously romantic' view of Paris by somebody who'd just returned to the UK after working there for a while.
Getting back to 'Classical Live', I've noticed a steady increase in the use of performances from the BBC archives that were first broadcast anything up to25 years ago, so they're clearly not going to have any trouble filling the 3 hours for the foreseeable future.
Back on topic - now if they would just provide the necessary to be able to listen to those archive recordings(ie listings and times) I would be inclined to become an afternoon listener again.
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Originally posted by oddoneout View PostThat rang a few memory bells. On one of our annual family camping trips to France we ended up somewhere in that area and visited the town several times. The pictures it left served me well in several subsequent French exams during the 60s and then again as an adult learner doing GCSE and AS level(with the demise of adult education and the loss of conversation classes the only way to do any French was as an exam course) in 2001/2.
Back on topic - now if they would just provide the necessary to be able to listen to those archive recordings(ie listings and times) I would be inclined to become an afternoon listener again.
(By the way, it was after hearing Alun Huddinott's 'Lanterne des Morts' that we went on a guided walking tour based in Sarlat. To our delight, we discovered that we could see the inspiration for AH's composition from our hotel bedroom!)
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Originally posted by LMcD View Post
Unfortunately, I think the idea is to encourage people to keep listening for as long as possible by making it difficult for them to cherry pick items of particular interest.
(By the way, it was after hearing Alun Huddinott's 'Lanterne des Morts' that we went on a guided walking tour based in Sarlat. To our delight, we discovered that we could see the inspiration for AH's composition from our hotel bedroom!)
The question of excluding those who can't use that should be an issue, but evidently isn't, as with the wider assumption that everyone has a smart phone to carry out day to day functions.
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Originally posted by LMcD View PostUnfortunately, I think the idea is to encourage people to keep listening for as long as possible by making it difficult for them to cherry pick items of particular interest.
It's on top of this that R3's music content is being 'diluted' with genres outside the traditional classical-jazz-world output. Additionally, what remains of the classical output has been made simpler-and-less-demanding-in-order-to-appeal-to-a-broader-audience.
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 oddoneout View Post
Not just France. But it's still the issue of whether other factors outweigh the downsides - quality of life, such as(to bring it back slightly on topic) attitude to the arts.
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Originally posted by LMcD View Post
Let's hope Germany and Italy, where I believe the arts are still respected if not cherished, don't go the same way
Family in the music performance world in the Netherlands have had to face considerable constraints caused by reductions in state and other funding, but when it starts from so very much higher a level in the first place then it doesn't get anywhere near the state of things in this country.
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