Originally posted by DracoM
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Essential Classics - The Continuing Debate
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Originally posted by oddoneout View PostI regard EA's slots as another chance to extend my education - a chance to hear music I would otherwise not come across - which is part of the wider place of R3 in my life. I don't have to like a particular piece, but the much disliked snippet/fillet format of the morning schedules means that something else will come along shortly. My difficulty with her is her voice - I have difficulty for some reason making out the spoken word (for much of my life, so not the fault of advancing age!) at the best of the times, and her muffled (is the best way I can put it) delivery I find particularly hard to interpret.
Has Katie D been on R3 at all in recent months? I don't seem to have heard her, and I have the radio on for much of the day everyday; perhaps I've just been lucky...bong ching
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Originally posted by eighthobstruction View Post........so you have had a life free from GUSH recently....you must have saved yourself a great deal of energy [and accidents] flying across the room to hit the off button....
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Originally posted by Braunschlag View Post2:2 here from the same place Peter, and I’m almost certain that you are from Silsden! Do correct me if I’m wrong....
In the '70s, when I was there, it was "Huddersfield School of Music". I recently noticed that there's nothing on the PolytechnicxxxxxxxxxxUniversity web site to acknowledge that it was ever anything other than the "department of music". Very remiss in my view, given the School's fierce struggle to prevent assimilation by the Polytechnic (the tale of the impromptu performance by the massed orchestral forces of the "1812 Overture" and Shostakovich 5 outside the central services building, in order to disrupt a crucial meeting, is something which should be preserved. Unfortunately I missed the actual event by about a year.).
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Originally posted by peterthekeys View PostSorry - just seen this. Yes, you are correct! (Originally from Devon, but have been in Silsden for most of the last forty years.)
In the '70s, when I was there, it was "Huddersfield School of Music". I recently noticed that there's nothing on the PolytechnicxxxxxxxxxxUniversity web site to acknowledge that it was ever anything other than the "department of music". Very remiss in my view, given the School's fierce struggle to prevent assimilation by the Polytechnic (the tale of the impromptu performance by the massed orchestral forces of the "1812 Overture" and Shostakovich 5 outside the central services building, in order to disrupt a crucial meeting, is something which should be preserved. Unfortunately I missed the actual event by about a year.).
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostShostakovitch 7 would have been the one I would have chosen.
The fact that I missed it is one of my greatest regrets
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Originally posted by peterthekeys View PostAs I had the story from several students who had participated, they confined themselves to the last movement of Shostakovich 5, and played it in alternation with the "1812". The eventual ensemble consisted of every student who could play an orchestral instrument (there were about 20 trumpets), augmented by all the pianists, organists and singers, who had visited the percussion room and found something to hit. It was reported that the performances could be heard on the other side of Huddersfield. As hoped, the meeting came to a premature end. Apparently as the attendees exited the building, one of the suits commented: "Very nice!"
The fact that I missed it is one of my greatest regrets
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Originally posted by kernelbogey View PostI like Ian Skelly's programmes, and listened to all of Tuesday's EC on a long drive. Somehow the music got increasingly on my nerves. My irritable part complained 'Too many screechy cellos, and wobbly sopranos' - a strange reaction.
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Originally posted by LMcD View PostThey're both short, bossy and NEVER wrong?"...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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