Music backwards?
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Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostI wasn't agreeing or disagreeing
As you seldom contribute to this discussion (which on the other thread has been a constant theme for years) you apparently don't understand a fairly general feeling expressed, not just here, but elsewhere.
Playing a piece of music backwards is a mind-numbingly crass idea, like deciding you're going to walk backwards all day - amusing for the children. If you want to experiment doing this at home with a Haydn Mass or Mahler Symphony, you are free to have a bit of fun. Meanwhile, I think I stated the main issues involved on Msg 11. However, they do call for a modicum of thought.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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I have donned my cranial protection here and am not going to peer further over the parapet than is absolutely necessary, but can I please humbly suggest that there are possibly more than a few R3 listeners (including me)who are not quite so exercised/ irritated/insulted by either Essential Classics in general and the brainteaser in particular? I wouldn't be sorry if said item was dropped, but it doesn't provoke me to switch off, and sometimes I've even managed to know the answer....I do wish that the naming ceremony could be dropped though. I'm not saying there isn't room for improvement in the EC format, but I'm not convinced that complete removal is the solution.
Look down your knowledgeable noses by all means but please remember we can't all be high brow musical encyclopedias, nor does everyone listening to R3 want the same thing of it. I don't like the Thursday afternoon 'gap' that is the opera matinee slot, and am likely not alone in that, but that's not a reason to say it shouldn't be there. Given the 24 hour R3 output and choice of ways to listen to it, is the EC irritation such a big deal?
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Originally posted by oddoneout View PostGiven the 24 hour R3 output and choice of ways to listen to it, is the EC irritation such a big deal?
The audience for CD Masters, and for the programmes that were on before it which I regularly listened to, is now offered Essential Classicals which was Roger Wright's strategy for counteracting Classic FM's new John Suchet programme. If Radio 3 were genuinely completely different from Classic FM, it wouldn't have a 3-hour programme like this on every weekday. Telling people to switch off or 'there's always iPlayer' is simply setting those who like it, along with the quizzes, and guest spots, and music played bacwards, against those who don't. And favouring the ones who do.
My question was, why should this group take over the Radio 3 mornings and leave those who had expected something, I will say 'more to their taste' (so that I'm not accused of being elitist, looking down my nose, snobbish etc) with nothing at that time. Fair's fair, isn't it?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 ferneyhoughgeliebte View Postem rof "laed gib" a era snoitatirri hcuS .steewt gnitluser eht dna "resaeT niarB" eht ekil serutaef fo esuaceb ylesicerp - 03:01 erofeb 3R hcum yrev ot netsil t'nod IIt 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 PostBut you do tend to introduce a somewhat dissenting attitude, almost as a knee-jerk reaction. People whose primary interest is classical music ('traditional' meaning!) want to listen to it seriously and not have fun and play games. Encouraging them to 'listen to it in different ways' is not what it's about. Such a shame that we are soooo unadventurous, but there you are.
Playing a piece of music backwards is a mind-numbingly crass idea, like deciding you're going to walk backwards all day - amusing for the children. .
Never mind
as you were
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Originally posted by jean View Post
Not for those who listen "seriously" to "serious" music
Do the Friends of R3 have a festive mounting block ?
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A composer creating a piece of music which involves reversing his, her or another composer's theme as part of a new composition isn't really the same thing, is it?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 PostA composer creating a piece of music which involves reversing his, her or another composer's theme as part of a new composition isn't really the same thing, is it?
But it's only a game on a light hearted radio programme FFS
and it's very like the kind of stuff that saint David Munrow would have done on his programme don't you think?
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Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostNo
But it's only a game on a light hearted radio programme FFS
and it's very like the kind of stuff that saint David Munrow would have done on his programme don't you think?
Anyway, as long as this diversion doesn't expand into playing whole works backwards, we will be spared a Shostakovich Sixth Symphony that opens in riotous slapstick and ends in the profoundest gloom, which is not quite what the composer intended...
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Originally posted by ahinton View Post...but for children, surely?...
Someone spent a lot of time doing this
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Originally posted by ahinton View Post...but for children, surely?...
Anyway, as long as this diversion doesn't expand into playing whole works backwards, we will be spared a Shostakovich Sixth Symphony that opens in riotous slapstick and ends in the profoundest gloom, which is not quite what the composer intended...
The Postlude to Hindemith's Ludus Tonalis would do nicely for the purposes of this game, seeing that it's an exact reversal of the Prelude.
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I really thought they had stopped doing these moronic antics during a supposedly serious programme. I even remarked recently about a perceived improvement in the morning broadcasts.
I've been giving Radio 3 another chance, since I've found myself scanning a considerable number of Annual Reports of my old school's Old Scholars' Association. It's a deadly boring occupation, so I've invested in Sennheiser R185 open-backed wireless headphones and listen to R3 as I toil through the reports. (I cover two reports in a day, if I'm lucky, and they date back to 1882.)
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