jonfan - a good many people listen to BAL on their kitchen or car radios. Sound-wise, yes, you'd need to rely on what's said and then go to say Spotify or whatever to sample but as far as interpretation is concerned it would be easily managed. And that for me is the crux of the matter, I mean comparing what Honeck, Karajan or Toscanini do with a piece. Sound is important but you need to be able to listen through it as well as to it.
Skelly replaces Cowan
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Further from Facebook
"About a year ago I happened to ve walking down Regent Street near Broadcasting House and saw a chap coming towards me with a security tag around his neck and, yes, a rucksack ! Rob was extremely gentlemanly when I importuned him to tell him how much I liked his programme and style of presenting. A red-letter day to have such a chance meeting :)"
May I add my best wishes Rob and thanks for the memories ......
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Originally posted by antongould View PostFurther from Facebook
"About a year ago I happened to ve walking down Regent Street near Broadcasting House and saw a chap coming towards me with a security tag around his neck and, yes, a rucksack ! Rob was extremely gentlemanly when I importuned him to tell him how much I liked his programme and style of presenting. A red-letter day to have such a chance meeting :)"
May I add my best wishes Rob and thanks for the memories ......
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Originally posted by Rob Cowan View Postjonfan - a good many people listen to BAL on their kitchen or car radios. Sound-wise, yes, you'd need to rely on what's said and then go to say Spotify or whatever to sample but as far as interpretation is concerned it would be easily managed. And that for me is the crux of the matter, I mean comparing what Honeck, Karajan or Toscanini do with a piece. Sound is important but you need to be able to listen through it as well as to it.
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The recording quality often comes 2nd to the music and or performance. A lot of the music I listen to doesn't have a 'modern' recording or a recording at all, and sometimes is merely from a 40-70 year old radio broadcast, the work I'm currently listening to, Vitaly Gubarenko's 2nd Symphony, being a case in point. It is a privilege for me just to have the opportunity to listen to this music and I'm thankful to those people who take the trouble to make it available for others to hear.
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Originally posted by jonfan View PostRob, you’ve alerted me to fantastic recordings from the past over the years and your enthusiasm has been infectious. Today’s BAL was a case in point, listening on my kitchen radio I could hear Heddle Nash from 1945 and Antony Rolfe Johnson from 1993 in balanced sound using the engineering of the time. Fine, Culshaw, Legge, Floating Earth worked, and work, at producing perfectly balanced sound using the technology of their time and it is an effrontery to adjust the sound in an arbitrary way. Whether I’m in my car, in my kitchen or in front of my state of the art hifi, I expect to hear what the engineers put on the tape. Only that way can I judge different performances in an honest way.
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Well if leaving R3 means Rob is freed up participate often here on the Forum as a 'friend' (rather than 'employee'!) of the station, then I for one take that as a huge bonus!"...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 Caliban View PostWell if leaving R3 means Rob is freed up participate often here on the Forum as a 'friend' (rather than 'employee'!) of the station, then I for one take that as a huge bonus!
I can see I may have to add CFM to my car radio's 'favourite' pre-sets.
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostAnd perhaps that other CD master, member Swain might make further contributions here, too.
I can see I may have to add CFM to my car radio's 'favourite' pre-sets.
(I wonder if Rob would be able to tell who I actually am, without giving me away? )
Bit like the knight Lohengrin?Don’t cry for me
I go where music was born
J S Bach 1685-1750
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Originally posted by Caliban View PostWell if leaving R3 means Rob is freed up participate often here on the Forum as a 'friend' (rather than 'employee'!) of the station, then I for one take that as a huge bonus!
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Originally posted by Rob Cowan View PostThanks Caliban. A bit like the old R3 'Message Board' days when aside from one or two snipers - remember the tireless Joyce Hatto promoter? He got his comeuppance! - we all had fun. Just forgive me if on occasion I don't have the time to engage as much as I'd like to. Best. Rob."...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 Zucchini View PostSycophants, Toadies ...
48 hours ago the usual 6-8 were slagging Rob off something rotten ...
Now he's appeared, they want to polish his wellies & carry his rucksack ...
Pathetic.Don’t cry for me
I go where music was born
J S Bach 1685-1750
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Originally posted by Zucchini View PostSycophants, Toadies ...
48 hours ago the usual 6-8 were slagging Rob off something rotten ...
Now he's appeared, they want to polish his wellies & carry his rucksack ...
Pathetic.
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For me, it is NOT Rob the man, but what he has manifestly been constrained to do by the gumps i/c R3.
We KNOW what he can do when given the chance, but Essential Classics ain't his best thing IMO.
Frankly, I think he's very shrewd in taking the offer to jump ship. He and Catherine Bott are R3's biggest losers.
My guess is that there will be more to come.
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