I think the timeslot is important. Timepoint and duration.
I don't recall Homewardbound, was it also on at 7pm or thereabouts? ... its name suggests: yes.
Half-an-hour strikes me as short as a programme: emulating the length of one side of C60 cassette tape, I guess.
As an dance and electronic music fan, I listen to alot of mixes and mixtapes and they are always a hit-and-miss affair. A well known phenomenon is to really like a piece when it's couched inside a mixtape, and then being less enthusiastic about it when listening to it in isolation. So expecting to be continuously inspired by a mixtape is the wrong approach. They are about transition and juxtaposition as much as they are about the pieces of music themselves.
Definitely there is a bit of muzak and wallpaper about them. Disposability I suppose. Definitely it won't be liked by some listeners and they will skip it. Even those that like the format will find a few of them fall entirely flat.
It comes across as an early evening Late Junction spin-off. Actually, Late Junction already has stretches of musical pieces not stitched together by commentary. And also experiments with transitions and juxtapositions.
Having over-used the word juxtaposition, I get a feeling .. it was used in the name of an R3 programme? I forget. ANyway, just my 2cents on the In Tune Mixtape.
I don't recall Homewardbound, was it also on at 7pm or thereabouts? ... its name suggests: yes.
Half-an-hour strikes me as short as a programme: emulating the length of one side of C60 cassette tape, I guess.
As an dance and electronic music fan, I listen to alot of mixes and mixtapes and they are always a hit-and-miss affair. A well known phenomenon is to really like a piece when it's couched inside a mixtape, and then being less enthusiastic about it when listening to it in isolation. So expecting to be continuously inspired by a mixtape is the wrong approach. They are about transition and juxtaposition as much as they are about the pieces of music themselves.
Definitely there is a bit of muzak and wallpaper about them. Disposability I suppose. Definitely it won't be liked by some listeners and they will skip it. Even those that like the format will find a few of them fall entirely flat.
It comes across as an early evening Late Junction spin-off. Actually, Late Junction already has stretches of musical pieces not stitched together by commentary. And also experiments with transitions and juxtapositions.
Having over-used the word juxtaposition, I get a feeling .. it was used in the name of an R3 programme? I forget. ANyway, just my 2cents on the In Tune Mixtape.
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