I have a couple of hundred cassettes recorded in the 80s and 90s, mostly off-air from Radio 3. Many live concerts. I rarely play them but there's good stuff in there. Quality is OK and I won't throw them out.
Essential Classics - The Continuing Debate
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Originally posted by cloughie View PostCould it be that there is more R3 archive footage around on private cassette collections than the BBC has itself after serial wipings!
Oh, and promise me exemption from needing a licence in just over one year's time!
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Originally posted by Wychwood View PostLovely to hear FS Kelly's Elegy: In Memoriam Rupert Brooke on EC this morning. Such a beautiful, haunting piece, imvho.
IIRC, Pabmusic posted a link to this Youtube video on the forum a while back, and I acknowledge that in reviving it now: surely a perfect blend of music, images and words.
https://youtu.be/aK19TZfoHLo
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Originally posted by antongould View Post“Has no one else noticed that ....... as an oasis of great music, is being gradually destroyed? It is invaded increasingly by light-classical and light music (eg in the early morning ... programmes): and listeners are presented with more and more magazine programmes, and assortments of bits and pieces ....... I protested to the Director of Music in the hope that he would be glad to reassure me, but my letter was not answered. If it is not yet time to mourn the passing of an exceptional flower of our culture, let us recognise and condemn this deplorable tendency to propagate and tolerate the trivial. Who is it that imagines or pretends that there is any merit in broadcasting jaunty little tunes interspersed with a disc-jockey’s chatter?”
Well that’s me told - but when ........ ????
If the morning schedule was indeed solely 'jaunty little tunes' I would have stopped listening years ago; as I have remarked on more than one occasion even I do have my limits.
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Originally posted by oddoneout View PostThat's quite some generalisation and, dare I say, a fair dose of trivialisation of the works that are played.
If the morning schedule was indeed solely 'jaunty little tunes' I would have stopped listening years ago; as I have remarked on more than one occasion even I do have my limits.
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Originally posted by oddoneout View PostNot this century I would guess, but the opinions expressed could be yesterday judging by some posts on this thread.
For me this posting is a coincidence as I was going to start a thread asking for the return of a day on R3 devoted to 'light music', having listened to some Trevor Duncan and Eric Coates and having been reminded just how accomplished and tuneful they were.
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Originally posted by gradus View Post1955, per the reference to 'light music' and 'disc-jockeys' but there's a certain self-conscious archaism in the writing so (if a second guess is allowed) possibly contemporary. I'm not putting money on either however.
For me this posting is a coincidence as I was going to start a thread asking for the return of a day on R3 devoted to 'light music', having listened to some Trevor Duncan and Eric Coates and having been reminded just how accomplished and tuneful they were.
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Originally posted by gradus View Post1955, per the reference to 'light music' and 'disc-jockeys' but there's a certain self-conscious archaism in the writing so (if a second guess is allowed) possibly contemporary. I'm not putting money on either however.
For me this posting is a coincidence as I was going to start a thread asking for the return of a day on R3 devoted to 'light music', having listened to some Trevor Duncan and Eric Coates and having been reminded just how accomplished and tuneful they were.
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Originally posted by gradus View Post1955, per the reference to 'light music' and 'disc-jockeys' but there's a certain self-conscious archaism in the writing so (if a second guess is allowed) possibly contemporary. I'm not putting money on either however.
For me this posting is a coincidence as I was going to start a thread asking for the return of a day on R3 devoted to 'light music', having listened to some Trevor Duncan and Eric Coates and having been reminded just how accomplished and tuneful they were.
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