Originally posted by JFLL
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Classic FM attacks Radio 3!
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Originally posted by Suffolkcoastal View PostMy experience isn't that different. I developed an interest in and love of classical music before I was 10 and before I ever had a music teacher. My parents aren't particularly musical either. Most of my musical discoveries have been 'made off my own back' without any guidance or encouragement as was the ability to compose. R3 was admittedly of great benefit to me for many years, if the Radio 3 of 20-30 years ago was as it is now though, I seriously doubt if my interest would have developed so strongly.
but as I said, this kind of experience is very much a minority one
it just happens that those who have had this communicate about it more ..........
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Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostIndeed
but as I said, this kind of experience is very much a minority one
it just happens that those who have had this communicate about it more ..........
About 40% of R3's audience listens to Classic FM. My guess would be that they switch over whenever R3 is broadcasting anything other than classical music - which is their prerogative. But there's no clear evidence that Classic leads many people to Radio 3: with CFM they've found a comfortable niche. There are other ways of 'discovering' classical music which are more likely to lead to R3 than the easy pap approach.
Classic FM was in the easy listening classical market long before R3: let them get on with it.
Only a minority will be attracted to Radio 3: there have to be more intelligent ways of enthusing them than Your Call or Rick Stein's Top Three.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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keithbraidwood2
Originally posted by french frank View PostKeith - I've PM'd you.
If you're still thinking about a FoR3 Twitter account let me know.
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Paul Sherratt
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Paul Sherratt
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View Post
... I don't think that the blessed Brian knows any words with fewer than 140 characters!
"...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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Originally posted by Paul Sherratt View Post>>About 40% of R3's audience listens to Classic FM
That's astonishing.
Meanwhile Classic FM will be playing Elgar, Tchaikovsky, Mozart, Albinoni and likely getting a million listeners even at at that time, with very few commercial interruptions.
So, who is best serving the classical listener?- - -
John W
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Paul Sherratt
John,
Nowadays I only listen to Radio 3, if at all, after 11.00pm. Radio listening for me has always been a matter of looking out for those diamonds in the dirt.
And simple business sense says that CFM can't be getting bus loads of listeners at that hour if they aren't broadcasting adverts.
PS
This may be a little feeble-minded of me but isn't Radio 3 serving the classical music listener, in all their shapes, for around twenty two hours each day ?
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Well, I gave up looking for diamoinds on late night Radio 3. Only so much time I can waste when the diamonds are elsewhwere.
Remember WE might be over-familiar with much of Classic FM's playlist, I mean, like, I don't want to listen again to highlights from Swan Lake at 11.00pm either :o
But a million, OK hundreds of thousands, of folk DO want that music at night. On Radio 2, before the death of Alan Keith, his Y100BT tunes programme was getting >200,000 listeners late at night.
Classic FM is now providing for that audience; the BBC is not.- - -
John W
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