Essential Classics - The Continuing Debate
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostThe two poles of the programme were encapsulated for me at around 9:20 this morning when, after a superb performance of the Bach Triple Concerto BWV 1044 (complete) which really got me in a good mood, RC read out an assinine (no - that's not a spelling mistake!) tweet from a listener claiming that he didn't understand how someone who liked Bruckner could also mnngyer like listening to nnngye nnngyer this plinky-plonky-tonky-wonky mmnninniynggg harpsichordy wehinghymingey fnukfnnaaarrr gurgle stuff.
And THEN RC commented that this was a "fascinating" opinion!!!!!!!! No it wasn't - it was a public declaration of imbecility. What other fascinations might the chap shared - his perplexity with other matters beyond his intellectual compass - like spoons f'rinstance???!!!
Put me in a foul mood, I tell ye ... FOUL!!!!!Last edited by Stanfordian; 21-10-16, 13:15.
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Originally posted by cloughie View PostRichard, just think how more annoying it would be if it had actually been scored for bagpipes.Last edited by Stanfordian; 21-10-16, 13:15.
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The email address is essentialclassics@bbc.co.uk if anyone felt moved to make a comment about the worthlessness of reading out an email like that on air. Rob gaves his 'answer' afterwards, but if he wanted to air his view he could have done so without reading out 'Rob(ert)'s' email at all, which was [sorry ferney, avert your eyes]:
"I just don't believe that someone who admires Mahler, Bruckner, Beethoven and everyone else like them [sic] can like this dreadful, tinkling piping Bach …"
If you're going to read it out, instead of saying "it's an interesting point, Robert", why not have the guts to say that as an opinion it's of zilch interest. Better still, make an editorial judgement on it and bin it.
Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostThe two poles of the programme were encapsulated for me at around 9:20 this morning when, after a superb performance of the Bach Triple Concerto BWV 1044 (complete) which really got me in a good mood, RC read out an assinine (no - that's not a spelling mistake!) tweet from a listener claiming that he didn't understand how someone who liked Bruckner could also mnngyer like listening to nnngye nnngyer this plinky-plonky-tonky-wonky mmnninniynggg harpsichordy wehinghymingey fnukfnnaaarrr gurgle stuff.
And THEN RC commented that this was a "fascinating" opinion!!!!!!!! No it wasn't - it was a public declaration of imbecility. What other fascinations might the chap shared - his perplexity with other matters beyond his intellectual compass - like spoons f'rinstance???!!!
Put me in a foul mood, I tell ye ... FOUL!!!!!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 ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostThe two poles of the programme were encapsulated for me at around 9:20 this morning when, after a superb performance of the Bach Triple Concerto BWV 1044 (complete) which really got me in a good mood, RC read out an assinine (no - that's not a spelling mistake!) tweet from a listener claiming that he didn't understand how someone who liked Bruckner could also mnngyer like listening to nnngye nnngyer this plinky-plonky-tonky-wonky mmnninniynggg harpsichordy wehinghymingey fnukfnnaaarrr gurgle stuff.
And THEN RC commented that this was a "fascinating" opinion!!!!!!!! No it wasn't - it was a public declaration of imbecility. What other fascinations might the chap shared - his perplexity with other matters beyond his intellectual compass - like spoons f'rinstance???!!!
Put me in a foul mood, I tell ye ... FOUL!!!!!
*or someone hitting a birdcage with a toasting folk if it needs to be suitable for the time of the day.Last edited by doversoul1; 21-10-16, 20:42.
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Originally posted by Pulcinella View Post
RC just now: you can email, text, tweet,......... If you can't be bothered to do any of those you can just.......(something like sit back and enjoy the music).
All that said (or rather unsaid), I was recently sent a link (which I will wisely refrain from reproducing here) to an hour long interview recently broadcast on an American public radion station with a Scottish pianist whose first CD of a 2- (or possibly 3-) CD survey of the piano music of Ronald Stevenson has just been released and I was left wondering how on earth the said pianist managed to get through it all without throwing a Steinway Model D at the hapless, hopeless and frankly nauseating interviewer, by contrast with the manner and matter of whose presentation the very worst gaffes and tasteless irrelevances spouted forth from time to time by certain Radio 3 presenters would come across as manna from heaven; believe me, it was so execrable that, had said interviewer been a membver of Radio 3's staff and the item broadcast there, he would almost certainly be "presented" with a P45 prontissimo.Last edited by ahinton; 26-10-16, 09:26.
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostDid he actually say the latter bit?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 DracoM View PostThe only regular broadcasters I know who have a proper sense of self-deprecating, cleverly mocking irony about the whole panoply of the twittershpere are Eddie Mair [PM]and Paddy O'Connell [BH]. Both riveting.
Originally posted by Caliban View PostA real treat to have some sensible discourse among the music this week, too, thanks to Ian Skelly; amusing as well, I like the way he accommodates the need for listener tweets'n'emails by taking the mickey out of the correspondents... Such a change from the glutinous sycophancy of other presenters (in recent times, but still sometimes these days... Rob Cowan), praising even the lamest contribution as 'fascinating &c. &c.'."...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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