Originally posted by underthecountertenor
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Excuse me but do you mean….?
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostSince PG has quite a long record of R3 presentation, it would indeed seem likely that she simply wasn't listening to the music being broadcast; I cannot imagine an alternative explanation for this gaffe. That said, as it was clearly not a simple case of the wrong CD being selected (as this was a broadcast of a live concert), it does seem all the more likely that the presenter simply wasn't listening to the music being relayed, for I cannot imagine PG making so fundamental a mistake through an inability to distinguish between those two concertos, the latter of which is very well known indeed.
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This is just a guess but it maybe that presenters are not allowed to correct mistakes on the script or brief in their capacity. My example about countertenor/castrato was on Early Music Late presented by Elin Manahan Thomas. It was impossible that EMT didn’t know the difference. As it was a recorded programme it could have been corrected during the recording but it wasn’t. I think it is unfair to call all mistakes as a gaffer although some are definitely deserve to be called that.
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Originally posted by doversoul1 View PostThis is just a guess but it maybe that presenters are not allowed to correct mistakes on the script or brief in their capacity. My example about countertenor/castrato was on Early Music Late presented by Elin Manahan Thomas. It was impossible that EMT didn’t know the difference. As it was a recorded programme it could have been corrected during the recording but it wasn’t. I think it is unfair to call all mistakes as a gaffer although some are definitely deserve to be called that.
(All right, all right, I'll get my coat!)
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Originally posted by doversoul1 View PostThis is just a guess but it maybe that presenters are not allowed to correct mistakes on the script or brief in their capacity. My example about countertenor/castrato was on Early Music Late presented by Elin Manahan Thomas. It was impossible that EMT didn’t know the difference. As it was a recorded programme it could have been corrected during the recording but it wasn’t. I think it is unfair to call all mistakes as a gaffer although some are definitely deserve to be called that.
As to EMT, it's her programme. Again, I cannot believe that she is tied to a script regardless of obvious errors. And I'm afraid I am far from confident that she has a sufficient level of knowledge to present Early Music Late, or indeed that she was selected to present the programme on the basis of such knowledge, as opposed to her supposed value as a 'personality'.
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostJust a reminder that Radio 3 presenters write their own scripts.
There has been an occasion when the same script was read on two programmes by different presenters: the concert first broadcast on Through the Night was repeated on one of the predecessors of the Early Music Late. The same script was read by John Shea on Through the Night and by Jonathan Swain when it was repeated. Also, there have been a few occasions when the script on the broadcast and the blurb in the website were most part identical. From all this, I don’t think all scripts are written by the presenters.
underthecountertenor
Re: Elin Manahan Thomas
I can’t believe a specialist Baroque singer who has performed with the Monteverdi Choir, The Sixteen, and other early music groups has not enough knowledge about Baroque, especially vocal music. This is just my opinion but I don’t think EMT has the sort of ‘personality’ that is meant to carry the programme. Her script or presentation does not draw attention to the presenter unlike on some presenter oriented programmes.
The BBC is a massive organisation. If every presenter is allowed or expected to correct mistakes in the script they are given, the system has to be terribly complicated; what if the presenter mis- corrected it, if the presenter didn’t correct it or when the announcement is pre-recorded, who is to be responsible etc., etc.. I think it is most likely that the presenter is not expected to correct the (mis) information as s/he reads the script. I think there are probably different contracts amongst the presenters as I mention above.Last edited by doversoul1; 20-02-19, 20:11.
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Originally posted by doversoul1 View PostI think this depends on what you mean by presenters. Some presenters are primarily announcers (obviously good knowledge of classical music) while others present in the capacity of reviewer/critic; Sarah Walker and Andrew McGregor for example who obviously write their own script but I doubt Penny Gore, Gill Anderson, and maybe Ian Skelly do.
There has been an occasion when the same script was read on two programmes by different presenters: the concert first broadcast on Through the Night was repeated on one of the predecessors of the Early Music Late. The same script was read by John Shea on Through the Night and by Jonathan Swain when it was repeated. Also, there have been a few occasions when the script on the broadcast and the blurb in the website were most part identical. From all this, I don’t think all scripts are written by the presenters.
underthecountertenor
Re: Elin Manahan Thomas
I can’t believe a specialist Baroque singer who has performed with the Monteverdi Choir, The Sixteen, and other early music groups has not enough knowledge about Baroque, especially vocal music. This is just my opinion but I don’t think EMT has the sort of ‘personality’ that is meant to carry the programme. Her script or presentation does not draw attention to the presenter unlike on some presenter oriented programmes.
The BBC is a massive organisation. If every presenter is allowed or expected to correct mistakes in the script they are given, the system has to be terribly complicated; what if the presenter mis- corrected it, if the presenter didn’t correct it or when the announcement is pre-recorded, who is to be responsible etc., etc.. I think it is most likely that the presenter is not expected to correct the (mis) information as s/he reads the script. I think there are probably different contracts amongst the presenters as I mention above.
What makes you doubt that Penny Gore, Gill Anderson and (in particular) Ian ‘call me quirky’ Skelly write their own scripts?
As to EMT, it doesn’t follow from the fact that she has sung a fair amount of baroque music that she knows about the history of the thing. The fact is that she made a patent mistake on a recorded show, and neither she nor any of her team corrected it.
And I’m afraid your last paragraph makes no sense to me at all.
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Originally posted by underthecountertenor View PostSorry, but all the above seems a bit desperate to me.
What makes you doubt that Penny Gore, Gill Anderson and (in particular) Ian ‘call me quirky’ Skelly write their own scripts?
As to EMT, it doesn’t follow from the fact that she has sung a fair amount of baroque music that she knows about the history of the thing. The fact is that she made a patent mistake on a recorded show, and neither she nor any of her team corrected it.
And I’m afraid your last paragraph makes no sense to me at all.
As for Elin Manahan Thomas, I’m sure you don’t need to be told but almost all early music groups that are active today are very much research orientated. Performers don’t just learn the music they are to perform.
The last bit was just my fancy. Forget it.
I hope I have made things clearer.
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Originally posted by underthecountertenor View Post‘O Mio Bambino Caro’ from Elizabeth Alker this morning.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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