Originally posted by Bax-of-Delights
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Sunday Morning: Praise where praise is due
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mikerotheatrenestr0y
Praise again for Perfectly Normal Productions [and presumably for R3 for having chosen them as an outsource]; one whole work, Hogwood's Surprise; a Palestrina motet; Emil von Sauer playing Schumann movt. 1; Cherubini String 4tet movt. [all six are fun]; Spohr, one movt. from 9et; Richard Strauss, Rosenkavalier Waltzes [counts as a whole work]; Hovhaness; Shostakovich Prelude and Fugue; and, shattering that mood [as an amuse-bouche, like the Trenet that so annoyed Bach-worshippers the other week, but actually gave me great pleasure], a Frenchman singing "But not for me". Nothing, I submit, hackneyed, and the only chat was about musicians' accidents [cellist's fingertip, stolen Strad] - so, it was a wholly acceptable soundtrack to my Sunday morning. Just wish the washing-up and cleaning had been as interesting.
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Intersting comment by Suzy Klein this morning concerning the Reger Sextet. A listener had emailed in to say that it was about time this piece was played again as it had to be many years since it was heard on R3. Ms.Klein answered that indeed it was and that, and I quote, "the notes here show that it was last played in November 2005". Would this not indicate that every piece of music stored in the archive has a "last played" date attached to it, just like the old library books with the date of last issue on the front endpaper?
Which would lead us to the observation that there is indeed a "top 50" playlist that must be included in any week's output and that the presenters have very little choice (say 30%) in what they can play. The rest of it is scheduled by a central playlist committee perhaps?O Wort, du Wort, das mir Fehlt!
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mikerotheatrenestr0y
Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostMy concern is that it is presumptuous to think that the population has time to listen to Radio 3 on a Sunday, having no idea what is going to be played for the vast majority of the day.
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Part of the problem is not knowing when/if the online schedule will be updated from its bare bones details to a full playlist. For next Sunday, neither Radio Times nor the online schedule has any details about the music (RT rather decorously refers to 'Suzy's concert of the week' whereas the the youthful R3 peeps talk of her 'gig of the week': neither details any music).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 mikerotheatrenestr0y View PostSorry, but this is just NOT TRUE! On-line, everything seems to be listed, including the requests in the request programme, and even which bit of the B minor and by whom [pretty punctilious, considering]. Goodness knows what the physical Radio Times shows, granted, but the Great Dispenser of Information is dispensing it.
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mikerotheatrenestr0y
Point taken - but I'm a hand-to-mouth person, and don't plan a week ahead in that kind of way - though EMS does tell you it's doing Fux, all the requests are there, both lots of Through the Night, and the midnight Saturday EMS is there in full, as well as Words and Music... is this nearly 50%? And Radio Times for next Sunday isn't available till Tuesday... [which is not to miniise the annoyance at not having access to information which has already been decided].
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Heroic presenting at the moment from Rob Cowan whose voice seems about to give out at any moment.
Although the croakiness is rather painful to listen to (and probably for RC to emit), laryngitis is a great way of confounding the demands of R3 powers-that-be for excessive inane chatter...
Someone get that man a triple-strength toddy!!"...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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fugophile
It is pleasing to note that Sunday Morning has not yet conceded entirely to inane chatter and twits... sorry, I meant tweets. If only Breakfast could be more like this. There was an excellent selection from the Second Viennese School today, presented by the ever-knowledgable Rob Cowan. A shadow of the populist agenda is, alas, still lurking in the incessant soliciting of listeners' opinions.
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Originally posted by fugophile View PostIt is pleasing to note that Sunday Morning has not yet conceded entirely to inane chatter and twits... sorry, I meant tweets. If only Breakfast could be more like this. There was an excellent selection from the Second Viennese School today, presented by the ever-knowledgable Rob Cowan. A shadow of the populist agenda is, alas, still lurking in the incessant soliciting of listeners' opinions.I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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Rob Cowan seemed to be getting into the spirit of St. Patrick's Day this morning. I could have sworn he introduced today's cantata with an 'oirish' "jay-sus"!
Typically daring pronunciation of the German title, too, by RC - always a joy to hear - though not a patch on his rendering of 'Wachet Auf' mid-week.It loved to happen. -- Marcus Aurelius
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Simon
I was looking forward in hope to some Baroque when I switched on but I got Bartok's pointless discords. But then, bliss, the Rossini, and of course Ireland.
And now, having been forced to miss PP due to a visitor, its Ms Bott, with Monteverdi's operas. Poppea to come, no less!
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