....because there's not a moment goes by without some kind of interruption by this guy, who's becoming as irritating as the blessed Rob Cowan! For heaven's sake, sometimes I just feel like shouting STFU!!
It's The Andrew McGregor show!
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I've read the remarks about the change of format with BaL and can only agree that it's, imho, inferior to what we had before. (I have literally hundreds of episodes of CD/Record Review from 1998 until 2012 on minidisc and occasionally pull them out if there's a work I'm interested in).
However, I think it's very unfair to blame Andrew for this format and his contribution to it. There are many things about MY employment I don't agree with and I do protest up to a point. The reply is ALWAYS 'well, we appreciate your opinion but this is the way it's going to be and if you feel that strongly about it the door is the big wooden thing behind you!'
I suspect Andrew is in the same position. I can only imagine the layers of editors who are passing down edicts that have to be obeyed. What I'm saying is, give the guy a break!
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Originally posted by pastoralguy View PostWhat I'm saying is, give the guy a break!
As someone who has regarded for some time Record Review and its immediate predecessor as The Andrew McGregor Show, it matters not a jot to me whether he is compelled to take part in the deterioration of the programme or is the instigator of the changes - having possession of compromising photos of the Director General in a position which might most charitably be termed "compromising". The point, for me, is that the programme has become insufferable, and I suffer it no more - the move to a presenter-focussed concept of the programme has utterly ruined it for me. It would be the same no matter who the presenter - the difference being that we'd just have to substitute the name of another, possibly less break-worthy, individual.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Well, to defend Mr McGregor, we owed him thanks this morning for interjecting at least something to give us the odd clue as to the possible plot of La traviata, which the celebrity BaL presenter didn't see fit to do! At least AMcG was aware of the format's duty to people who didn't know the work in question.
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Originally posted by Paulie55 View Post....because there's not a moment goes by without some kind of interruption by this guy, who's becoming as irritating as the blessed Rob Cowan! For heaven's sake, sometimes I just feel like shouting STFU!!
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It is thought that The Powers That Be at the BBC read posts on this Forum. It is a moot point as to whether they react (a) in favour of, or (b) against our general views. I detect no movement on the McGregor/twofer point, but I did detect...I think.... un poco meno mosso in Tom Service's presentation of Music Matters today.
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Originally posted by ardcarp View PostIt is thought that The Powers That Be at the BBC read posts on this Forum. It is a moot point as to whether they react (a) in favour of, or (b) against our general views. I detect no movement on the McGregor/twofer point, but I did detect...I think.... un poco meno mosso in Tom Service's presentation of Music Matters today.
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Originally posted by cloughie View PostWhat you must remember is that the BBC are never wrong - they may tweak things slightly but they'll never own up!
Editorially, RR needs IMO to do a very serious re-think of where they are taking the programme. The more 'informal' they make it, ironically, the less informative it becomes. Sad, but...
AMcG is a GOOD broadcaster, yes, BUT is not having his talents put to good use in the format they have chosen. Now whether this is his own idea of self-promotion or the Editorial team's we may never know, but, whatever, the result is fuzz, fog and exasperation for many.
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Originally posted by cloughie View PostWhat you must remember is that the BBC are never wrong - they may tweak things slightly but they'll never own up!
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I respect your view - its just that its not mine, although of course I think respect for individuals is necessary and needs to be maintained. Looking at what I have written below, I trust and hope you do not take the strength of my feeling as directed at you.
For me, criticism is not of the presenter, the producer nor controller R3. I might be wrong, but I think the controller is subject to the demands of a Controller for "Music" of all the BBC. And if at the meetings where R3 controller is one amongst many, the demands are for presenter focussed presentation - along the lines we are seeing - and for accessibility (according to their concept) he probably has limited room for manoeuvre and cannnot resist the direction of travel.
And for a controller of all music on the BBC, Radio 3 is a minor backwater and just has to fit in with the whole corporate development. The R3 budget -including the Proms and orchestras - must appear out of all proportion when mass appeal is anywhere but the music for which R3 was created. However any corporate man would know Proms and Orchestras are BBC main board policy commitments (until such a times as they aren't) - so at the most to be tweaked perhaps but mostly left alone.
So - the criticism is of the corporate bureaucracy of the BBC and its outcomes, and in particular its dismissal of those aged over, say 50, as the audience of the past, on their way out and to have no influence.
But I am intrigued - apart from truly mass protest issues, can you point to instances where controllers of Radio stations have listened to the representations from their audience. When Radio 4's "feedback" programme manages to get responsible executives into the studio, they always seem to regard it as an opportunity to explain to us numpties why they are right and we are wrong....
There are a fair number of folk out there who hate the BBC and can't wait for it to lose the licence fee to subscription, and this sort of corporate arrogance only adds to that number. Although I happily pay the licence fee, and value the still many good things it provides, the degeneration of Record Review is a cause of great regret and should not go unchallenged. I grieve for the previous quality of BAL - if I want short, shallow, insufficiently informed /authoritative pointers to this content I can find it in the pages of the BBC music magazine (although I accept it has more worthy content as well) and similar or other sources of information. I envy Pulcinella (IIRC Pulcinella) his extensive BAL archive on minidisc.
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