It made a pleasant change, do it again sometime. I listened when I was near a radio and liked the juxtaposition of pieces with plenty that was new or unknown to me. Many thanks to the people who selected the pieces.
River of Music: 12 hrs Non-stop Music: Sunday 30 October
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Originally posted by Beef Oven! View PostBeen tuned in since about ten. Thoroughly enjoyable way of listening to broadcasted music. I think that R3 should do this on a regular basis (once a week?). Definitely gets my vote, in fact I’d say it’s excellent.Fewer Smart things. More smart people.
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostOne thing that I found curious was the relative lack of recordings from the Third/Radio 3 archive. The majority of the items included were from commercial CDs not originating from the BBC.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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Whether you like (one likes) or dislike this format is a matter of preference but to say that it is good because you are (one is) spared from inane chatters of presenters is, I think, very discourteous to all those excellent, professional presenters who daily enrich our listening experience.
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Originally posted by doversoul1 View PostWhether you like (one likes) or dislike this format is a matter of preference but to say that it is good because you are (one is) spared from inane chatters of presenters is, I think, very discourteous to all those excellent, professional presenters who daily enrich our listening experience.
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Originally posted by Beef Oven! View Post...I think that R3 should do this on a regular basis (once a week?). Definitely gets my vote, in fact I’d say it’s excellent.
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Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostWhy do you want/need to know?
Is one question to ask
How is the experience of hearing music changed by knowing who created it?
Is the experience diminished by not knowing? and so on
Of course, if I (or RB, AH etc) had written it then the reason to know is so you can go and buy it
I might want to know so that I can find and listen again to something that caught my interest.
I think you know reasons why foreknowledge/prejudice alters how and what one hears. However that was not what I was asking about. I am happy to listen 'blind', and I happen to think it's a worthwhile exercise for all sorts of reasons, but would be annoyed if I was unable to follow up an item which interested me - because it was new to me, because I want to know who dunnit, because I might want to know if my'guess' was correct etc.
Yes, if I couldn't find out I wouldn't be able to support either living composers or performers by buying a recording if the music appealed that much.Many years ago R3 did a series of Christmas sequences without info. One piece made such an impression that I got hold of the playlist, and subsequently went and bought the CD, which has not only been a yearly source of delight but also introduced me to some pieces I did not previously know.
Not everyone has sufficient musical knowledge/expertise to be able to make a start on tracking something down, and surely we would want to make it as easy as possible for everyone to have the opportunity to access the joys of music beyond popular/yoof culture? How many people got into classical music by hearing something on R3, being able to get a name for it and then going and following up?
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Originally posted by Alain Maréchal View PostEven TIE informed us, after each piece, to what we had been listening. Also it was devised and presented by Robert Simpson; which current candidate reaches his standards?
Wasn't there once a short late afteernoon sequence - 'Homeward Bound'? - in which the music was continuous for an hour or less; IIRC the pieces were announced at the end.
FF?
Perhaps this formula could be announcement-less, with a listing on the website; those who don't want to know could simply not look, while those who do could inform themselves in advance.
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River of Muzak
Feeling brave I re-tried Radio 3 later in the day to see how the 'River of Muzak' was flowing only to get the theme tune from Dr Who followed by a Brandenburg concerto that was split up with other inappropriate stuff between each movement, possibly Schoenberg. God, what's the sense in that?
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Apart from a couple of hours taken out in the afternoon for a hospital appointment I had this on all day. I am not sure that I gained anything more from it than I would on a 'normal' days listening. Quite a lot I tuned out of( including the final piece, so it came as a shock to suddenly hear a voice!), several pieces suffered, to my ears, from being shunted into the next, feeling that there wasn't a discernible connection between the items made for disengagement on my part(partly irritation, partly feeling inadequate that I couldn't find a connection), firing up the PC to get info on a couple of occasions meant I wasn't concentrating on what was being broadcast at that point.
My overall feeling is that I actually listened less than I would otherwise have done, because it was just running on in an amorphous fashion without points of reference, rather than me choosing to turn on a particular programme because I wanted to hear the music being broadcast.
In the overall scheme of things what my reactions were are not relevant - what matters is what, if anything, the powers that be decide to do as a result of this experiment and their interpretation of the feedback.
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Originally posted by DaisyDog View Postfollowed by a Brandenburg concerto that was split up with other inappropriate stuff between each movement, possibly Schoenberg. God, what's the sense in that?
Why should there always be conventional "sense" ?
It was only one day FFS
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Originally posted by DaisyDog View PostFeeling brave I re-tried Radio 3 later in the day to see how the 'River of Muzak' was flowing only to get the theme tune from Dr Who followed by a Brandenburg concerto that was split up with other inappropriate stuff between each movement, possibly Schoenberg. God, what's the sense in that?
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