From my experience the vast majority of young people, unless they are music students I guess, wouldn't be seen dead listening to Classic FM.
Skelly leaving Essential Classics
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Originally posted by Heldenleben View PostWhile we are in self-flagellation mode didn’t Kingsley Amis once say that contemporary composers ranked just above sex offenders in public esteem ? I hope he was joking. I’ve often wondered whether a UK politician who could play a bit would dare to perform a Mozart concerto like Helmut Schmidt once did or whether the PR a spin people would talk him/her out of it. They would argue that it’s elitist out-of-touch and fiddling while Rome burns etc.
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I don't think that classical music has ever been more than a minority taste -amongst my classmates I can't recall any who liked it and that included those learning horn and cello.
Such a shame that the BBC won't leave R3 alone, it's never going to attract many 'new listeners' imv. I'd be happy to pay a dedicated R3/R4 licence fee and forego the rest. What is the budget needed to keep it going for the enthusiasts, surely it can't be that much.
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostSome of us here are old enough to remember an English politician by the name of Edward Heath. A reasonable organist and enthusiastic amateur conductor. I recall a serviceable broadcast performance (BBC Oxford) of Haydn's Creation, under his baton.
*Something else in which Brexit effectively denies participation presumably.
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Originally posted by gradus View PostI don't think that classical music has ever been more than a minority taste -amongst my classmates I can't recall any who liked it and that included those learning horn and cello.
Such a shame that the BBC won't leave R3 alone, it's never going to attract many 'new listeners' imv. I'd be happy to pay a dedicated R3/R4 licence fee and forego the rest. What is the budget needed to keep it going for the enthusiasts, surely it can't be that much.
* or £135 if you include Radio 4 - but then it gets even more complicated for reasons I won’t bore you with.
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R3 isn't the way to get young people listening to "classical" music , and I don't think in terms of numbers it ever was, so there is no point in fiddling with programmes that have that as an aim. It misses the target audience and alienates the existing one. If an interest has been sparked, R3 may offer listening which can be followed up - but it is the sparking of the initial interest that is the now non-existent link between a potential audience and the need ( although that could be seen as a matter for debate in itself?) to ensure succession of a R3 audience. The sidelining of matters cultural, to the point of elimination, from what passes as education these days means that, as with introducing languages, the window of opportunity when children are not only receptive to new experiences but also happy to participate, is now well and truly closed.
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Originally posted by oddoneout View PostR3 isn't the way to get young people listening to "classical" music , and I don't think in terms of numbers it ever was, so there is no point in fiddling with programmes that have that as an aim. It misses the target audience and alienates the existing one. If an interest has been sparked, R3 may offer listening which can be followed up - but it is the sparking of the initial interest that is the now non-existent link between a potential audience and the need ( although that could be seen as a matter for debate in itself?) to ensure succession of a R3 audience. The sidelining of matters cultural, to the point of elimination, from what passes as education these days means that, as with introducing languages, the window of opportunity when children are not only receptive to new experiences but also happy to participate, is now well and truly closed.
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Originally posted by oddoneout View PostR3 isn't the way to get young people listening to "classical" music , and I don't think in terms of numbers it ever was, so there is no point in fiddling with programmes that have that as an aim. It misses the target audience and alienates the existing one. If an interest has been sparked, R3 may offer listening which can be followed up - but it is the sparking of the initial interest that is the now non-existent link between a potential audience and the need ( although that could be seen as a matter for debate in itself?) to ensure succession of a R3 audience. The sidelining of matters cultural, to the point of elimination, from what passes as education these days means that, as with introducing languages, the window of opportunity when children are not only receptive to new experiences but also happy to participate, is now well and truly closed.
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Originally posted by Heldenleben View PostIt got me listening to classical music and quite a few of the forumites from comments above but that was in the days when LPs were phenomenally expensive . Now listening to music of all genres is effectively free...
Now the 'fact based' programme is no more apart from CotW which no one dares touch and (sometimes) Record Review. The problem is that the 'bitty' classical programmes now predominate. At least in the days when, as a student, I went to visit friends who wanted to play their latest LP, we did listen to a whole Beatles LP, not 9 songs by different performers (with the odd Great American Songbook number or the theme from Born Free thrown in).
For me, we now have R3INO because it no longer has what I valued. As I said some while back, I do appreciate the difficulties a service like Radio 3 now has but I don't think the BBC has the right approach because, fundamentally, it doesn't care about Radio 3 and its core remit. The controller, I think, has an impossible job - and Drummond hung on to its values because he was that kind of bloke.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 Heldenleben View PostThere’s a very good summary of the cultural ebb and flow of Radio 3 on the wiki page .Just about every controller gets accused of dumbing down.I’d completely forgotten the great Paul Gambaccini (non) scandal - when he replaced COTW at 09.00 .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 PostThat was the point at which I first began to lose confidence. He sounded smooth and self-assured, but I didn't believe he knew any more than I did.
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Originally posted by Heldenleben View PostIt got me listening to classical music and quite a few of the forumites from comments above but that was in the days when LPs were phenomenally expensive . Now listening to music of all genres is effectively free...
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