Originally posted by doversoul
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The 'oh no not another thread' thread
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Don Petter
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Norfolk Born
Originally posted by doversoul View PostI am more than happy to be corrected. Spelling is (along with a lot of other) not my strongest point. (Having said that, there are rather a lot… )
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Firebird
Originally posted by Flosshilde View Post
I've noticed a few comments about Sean Rafferty - I think he is very good at his main job, In Tune. Whenever he's away the programme lacks the lightness (in the best sense) & ease he brings to it. He's also been a more than capable concert presenter when I've heard him.
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Originally posted by Firebird View PostWhile some of [SR's] interviewees have probably been well coached in the art of the soundbite, some, it is painfully obvious, are uncomfortable or inexperienced, and it can't be easy getting someone who is young and/or tongue-tied and/or a non-native speaker of English, to say something interesting, fairly quickly. Sometimes it goes badly wrong, but sometimes it's agreeable and mildly informative. Even at its coquettish worst, I prefer that to hearing interviewees harangued (e.g. Lebrecht badgering Hilary Hahn about why she doesn't seem to have a boyfriend) or asked portentously-sympathetic questions (e.g., Suzy Klein asking someone or other about how hard it is to maintain a 'work-life balance').
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Originally posted by Firebird View PostI sometimes find In Tune hard to take, when SR takes his strengths to the point where they become weaknesses, and lightness become campy triviality.
Originally posted by Extended Play View PostSurely at least some of these presenters are performing as they do against their better judgment -- at the behest of producers who are following orders from higher up the chain of command.
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Firebird
Originally posted by ahinton View PostMon Dieu! Did those two things really happen? I suppose that they must have done, otherwise you'd not have mentioned them! If I'd been Hilary Hahn, I might have been tempted to respond to that particular part of the egregious NL's interrogation by putting forward the equally silly suggestion that it's because she prefers the Schönberg Concerto to boyfriends (and anyone reading this who's heard her fabulous recording of that seemingly long-intractable work will know what I mean here). As to the SK question, what IS a "work-life balance" other than a notion that has - and indeed can have - little or no possible impact upon or relevance to the careers of most composers and performers? - and the thought that an R3 presenter wouldn't already be well aware of this doesn't inspire a whole lot of confidence, does it?
Perhaps someone should start a thread about what questions listeners would actually like interviewers to ask of various musicians.
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Originally posted by Firebird View PostI don't know whether Hahn prefers music to boyfriends; her archly chilly response to NL indicated that she just wasn't going to discuss this in public. Good for her. If he really is the incisive cultural critic that he (or his handlers) present him as being, he should have been asking her about Schönberg et al., rather than the sort of questions any dizzy reporter for Mademoiselle or The Tatler could have asked (personally, I'd like to have heard more about the Ives sonatas).
Originally posted by Firebird View PostAs for work-life balance, what annoyed me about this was, first, the notion that this is somehow harder for a musician than for someone who scrubs floors for a living, but second (and even more), that people listening to an interview with a musician want to hear about something other than music.
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Firebird
Originally posted by ahinton View Postthose who scrub floors for a living usually do it within set hours, outside which they can at least try to live some kind of life, whereas the performer and composer have far less opportunities to do so because the hours occupied by their work and their thoughts about that work - not to mention international travel to and from it - are generally far harder to restrict. As to the second, do you mean that you're annoyed by the fact (if indeed it is one) that "people listening to an interview with a musician want to hear about something other than music" or by the perception or supposition on the part of some of those who interview musicians that "people listening to an interview with a musician want to hear about something other than music"? - if the latter, I can empathise...
Second, speaking as someone who does the kind of work that could easily expand to fit every waking moment of my time, I've grown suspicious of people who say their career absorbs their life. If high-level professional musicians are spending such vast amounts of time performing and travelling that they don't have time for a personal life, then they are doing that by choice: one can pick and choose assignments. In my own field, those who claim to be the busiest are those who choose never to say no. They are the people for whom it is existentially necessary to be ever on the run and who boast about how full their diaries are: the constant activity becomes an end in itself, proof that one really is important. That's their choice. If it makes them happy, good; but I don't feel sorry for them, given that the lives they lead are precisely the lives they've chosen to lead. Moreover, at least in my field, those who endlessly run around are not those who produce the best work.
Music is for me an avocation; when I listen to people for whom it is a career or vocation, I want to hear what they have to say about music, not about how hard it is to get the dry cleaner's before they close. A musician doesn't know any more about that than I do, and what I know, I wouldn't presume anyone else wants to hear.
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Black Swan
I can assure you that there are some of us out here who find Rob Cowan's entire presentational manner unbearable - knowledgeable as he may be.
I totally agree with you. His knowledge is for me seriously devalued by his presentation style and comments.
John
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Originally posted by Firebird View PostThose who scrub floors may do their first job within set hours, but many have to do something else as well to make ends meet. Moreover, when they get home, they most likely have to scrub their own floors (not having cleaners, as the better off may have) or (gasp!) may actually have to wash their own dishes, not having dishwashers. Such tasks mop up time, but can't really be considered 'life'. The fact that people have high-level jobs doesn't mean they necessarily have less time to spend on something other than paid employment or drudgery; those at the lower end of the income spectrum may spend less time on tasks related to their paid work, but more on the home-drudgery they can't pay other people to do. Life is hard all round.
Originally posted by Firebird View PostSecond, speaking as someone who does the kind of work that could easily expand to fit every waking moment of my time, I've grown suspicious of people who say their career absorbs their life. If high-level professional musicians are spending such vast amounts of time performing and travelling that they don't have time for a personal life, then they are doing that by choice: one can pick and choose assignments. In my own field, those who claim to be the busiest are those who choose never to say no. They are the people for whom it is existentially necessary to be ever on the run and who boast about how full their diaries are: the constant activity becomes an end in itself, proof that one really is important. That's their choice. If it makes them happy, good; but I don't feel sorry for them, given that the lives they lead are precisely the lives they've chosen to lead. Moreover, at least in my field, those who endlessly run around are not those who produce the best work.
Originally posted by Firebird View PostMusic is for me an avocation; when I listen to people for whom it is a career or vocation, I want to hear what they have to say about music, not about how hard it is to get the dry cleaner's before they close. A musician doesn't know any more about that than I do, and what I know, I wouldn't presume anyone else wants to hear.
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