Originally posted by aka Calum Da Jazbo
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Breakfast hijacked by Private Eye?
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Originally posted by Carmen View Postshort of civil disobedienceIt 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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amateur51
Originally posted by french frank View PostWell, the next Trust meeting seems to be 26 April. If we all jostled round the entrance to 180 Great Portland Street ...
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Originally posted by amateur51 View Postso just say the word french frank & I shall be thereIt 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 amateur51 View PostDo you want me to work on my Patricia Hughes impersonation over the weekend?
"As long as Radio Three goes on, the country's saved."
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hackneyvi
Originally posted by Carmen View PostDear, dear me, hackneyvi! Sub-human? Defensive or what?! And, please, don't get me started on the state of womanhood today! I'll have you know I'm an unashamed feminist (not many of those around these days) and am all for female presenters, but several of the current crop are as far removed from the great Patricia Hughes as they can get - with their gushing, giggly little girl voices, glottal stops, a hint of the 'street' ever present in their delivery. The very first time I heard Sarah Mohr-Pietsch on the breakfast programme, I couldn't believe my ears and nearly threw the radio across the room when I heard her remark, while noting that Charlie Chaplin had composed the music for all his films, that that made him "a bit of a control freak"! Until that day, Petroc Trelawny had had, in my book, the honour of being most irritating R3 presenter, but now that we have Sarah M-P, Katie and Clemency, I find Petroc almost bearable, and when not required to be 'tweety' and 'streety' himself (e.g. when presenting live concerts, not Breakfast), he's okay, and clearly is a knowledgeable man.
As for my need to have radio broaden my musical knowledge, why ever not? That's one of the joys of radio, to my mind much preferable to trawling through the internet to try and find stuff that might be of interest. Too much sitting down for a start!!!
You can't comprehend what Bax-of-Delights says about wanting the presenter to be talking to him/her alone, calling it a delusion. Of course we know that they aren't really talking to us personally! But again, I suggest it's one of the joys of radio that a good presenter can give the illusion of talking to the individual listener, and the listener can happily give in to that rather lovely illusion. Too bad for you that you can't, but, hey, we're all different!
Too much sitting down = too much work? There's not alot of effort goes into switching on and listening to a radio, is there?
You may experience the two-fold illusion that a presenter is talking to an individual listener but that listener isn't you.
Is it?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature...v=NKDXuCE7LeQ#!
Come on, Carmen. This might cheer you up.
[UNSUITABLE LINK REMOVED]
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Originally posted by Carmen View Post[...] You can't comprehend what Bax-of-Delights says about wanting the presenter to be talking to him/her alone, calling it a delusion. Of course we know that they aren't really talking to us personally! But again, I suggest it's one of the joys of radio that a good presenter can give the illusion of talking to the individual listener, and the listener can happily give in to that rather lovely illusion. Too bad for you that you can't, but, hey, we're all different!
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Sheds? SHEDS?? Perhaps the headline "Radio 3 sheds some of its presenters" might illustrate an answer to this problem.
Seriously, though, what I most fear about the present state of some of Radio 3 (NOT all of it!) is that it has an unfortunate and uncomfortable tendency to relect, rather than challenge, a far wider current phenomenon that music is being devalued to the extent that far too many people have develpoed what appears to come across as a kind of divine right to consume anything and everything, for free, just when it suits them and regardless of the interests of anyone else, especially including those who produce and present it. I hve no inherent objection to presenters talking about the music that they present, or indeed of the performers or composers, provided that the information given is correct, informative, interesting, pertinent and, above all, a mere handmaiden to the music itself which it is their job to present. Obviously, certain programmes presume the need for a good deal more talk than others - Discovering Music, for example, or indeed its long-ago quasi-progenitor Talking about Music - but, in these, the talk never descends to the level of mere inconsequential and distracting chatter.
Since any fair surmises about a particular presenter's manner and content must take due account of the programme producer's brief and the extent to which said presenter might fulfil it, I cannot help but wonder to what extent both Sara and Sarah (for example) - who do know a thing or two about their subject - present as they do out of solely personal choice or whether they're seeking to respond to a producer's aspirations and intention for the relaying of his/her programme; only they could tell us, I suppose but, until and unless they do, I'd be somewhat loath to fire off diatribes at presenters in case I'd be risking hitting the wrong targets.
As I've said before, were Radio 3 to inaugurate the Andrew McGregor School of Music Presentation, it would be no bad thing; no stuffiness, no undue reticence about enthusiasms, ample relevant information and, above all, a palpable desire to draw the listener into the music; I wish I knew what he kept in his garden shed but, recalling a remark that he made on a CD Review survey of the symphonies of Allan Pettersson, I can only assume that its contents must include a dustbin with a lid and some 4×2 timber...Last edited by ahinton; 14-04-12, 16:46.
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Carmen
Originally posted by ahinton View Post.......far too many people have develpoed what appears to come across as a kind of divine right to consume anything and everything, for free, just when it suits them and regardless of the interests of anyone else, especially including those who produce and present it.
Originally posted by ahinton View PostSince any fair surmises about a particular presenter's manner and content must take due account of the programme producer's brief and the extent to which said presenter might fulfil it, I cannot help but wonder to what extent both Sara and Sarah (for example) - who do know a thing or two about their subject - present as they do out of solely personal choice or whether they're seeking to respond to a producer's aspirations and intention for the relaying of his/her programme; only they could tell us, I suppose but, until and unless they do, I'd be somewhat loath to fire off diatribes at presenters in case I'd be risking hitting the wrong targets.
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Originally posted by Carmen View Postthe voice being of utmost importance in radio, I'm sure you'll agree - and some voices carp to the extent that one can only cry out in pain![FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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