Breakfast hijacked by Private Eye?

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  • Carmen

    Originally posted by Osborn View Post
    Chatter may be irritating for older people who want the station tailormade to their requirements but it doesn't bother me much. I just want an occasional 45mins of Breakfast to give me a decent start to the day, give me a news summary within that 45mins & hopefully some new music or performers to think about.
    Osborn, chatter is only irritating to "older people"? I'm perfectly happy with chatter in its proper place, e.g. Graham Norton, Elaine Paige, Terry Wogan - I listen to them all. But why should everything be homogenised? Why can't the stations be different from one other? That's what I love (or used to love) about the BBC.

    .

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    • ahinton
      Full Member
      • Nov 2010
      • 16122

      Originally posted by John Skelton View Post
      Carmen - it's Sara Mohr-Pietsch, not Sarah .





      Sara Mohr-Pietsch is the one with the specialist musical background. To be contrary, I've never been comfortable with the manner of presentation on Radio 3. It has always sounded contrived (from the hushed 'and now we go over to the ROYAL Festival Hall' of yesteryear to 'great tweet just come in!' of so now it's tomorrow already). It's the intrusive contentless content now that bugs me. And the insistence that I have to be part of a community of listeners. And the safety first programming. And the bits and pieces.
      Hear, hear! - And yes, to all those who keep making this mistake, it's SARA Mohr-Pietsch and SARAH Walker - and yes, they are tow quite distinct individuals...

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      • Ferretfancy
        Full Member
        • Nov 2010
        • 3487

        Originally posted by Crowcatcher View Post
        I once knew a R3 technical operator who worked with Patricia Hughes, apparently, whilst the music was playing she sat drawing the most fabulous pictures of horses.

        I miss her presence greatly and have a recording of her introducing Wilfred Brown's recording of 'Dies Natalis' - bliss on both counts.
        I was lucky enough to spend some time at St John's Smith Square for lunchtime concerts and met Patricia Hughes. She had just been doing a series of readings for Radio 3, and I told her how much I had enjoyed them. Her response was very modest,which I think was typical of her, it was almost as if she didn't really know how good she was, and asked quite a few questions seeking to find out which parts worked best for the listener.

        She and Joy Worth were simply the best.

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        • John Skelton

          Originally posted by Bryn View Post
          SM-P in not so much the one with the specialist musical knowledge more one of the presenters with such knowledge. She is, of course, the one who got the job via a talent competition.

          Take a look at the potted biographies and academic and musical background and current activities of each of the Radio 3 presenters.
          Ah, but I meant the one of Patricia Hughes and Sara Mohr-Pietsch to have a specialist musical background . And the only one of the two to have got the job via a talent competition, indeed .

          (I'm feeling very odd one out here, since I find the current Radio 3 ... manner teeth grindingly irritating yet I have no nostalgia for the Radio 3 manner of the mid-late 1970s early 1980s, when I first listened to R3).

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          • french frank
            Administrator/Moderator
            • Feb 2007
            • 30283

            Originally posted by John Skelton View Post
            (I'm feeling very odd one out here, since I find the current Radio 3 ... manner teeth grindingly irritating yet I have no nostalgia for the Radio 3 manner of the mid-late 1970s early 1980s, when I first listened to R3).
            So, I'm even odder one out since I wasn't even listening to Radio 3 that long ago.

            We were so poor we'd just got a cat's whisker to listen to the radio. (And the whisker didn't work anyway )
            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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            • kernelbogey
              Full Member
              • Nov 2010
              • 5745

              Originally posted by John Skelton View Post
              [...] (I'm feeling very odd one out here, since I find the current Radio 3 ... manner teeth grindingly irritating yet I have no nostalgia for the Radio 3 manner of the mid-late 1970s early 1980s, when I first listened to R3).
              A friend once described the older R3 style as 'a man in a dinner jacket with a pile of records in a darkened room' . It was less obtrusive, though, than the current (yes, inducing-teeth-grinding) style. Listening to tapes I made in the eighties with Peter Barker et al the 'continuity style' now sounds closer to the caricature of 1940s movies and Pathe News accents than today's R3 fandango.

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