Originally posted by pastoralguy
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BaL 4.07.15 - Rodgers: Carousel
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Richard Tarleton
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Originally posted by french frank View PostBut that's not the same with BaL. Trying to please too many audiences ends up pleasing no one. And I do think it's an issue of catering to specific tastes in specific areas of the schedule.
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I was very sarcastic, Richard. To be taken to hear the very greatest of musical theatre artists at Drury Lane is an experience that many would give their right arm for! Again, being sarcastic, the fact that my father took me to hear the greatest artists as a teenager was an experience that made me into the music lover I am today.
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Richard Tarleton
Ah
I am sure I enjoyed it at the time (I was being a bit sarcastic meself) but all changed for me when a different relative took me to, La Boheme at Sadlers Wells.....lightbulb moment
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Originally posted by seabright View PostGlad you liked Julian Ovenden who, I see, has lately been popping up
That's differing tastes for you.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 Richard Tarleton View PostAh
I am sure I enjoyed it at the time (I was being a bit sarcastic meself) but all changed for me when a different relative took me to, La Boheme at Sadlers Wells.....lightbulb moment
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Originally posted by Flosshilde View PostIf you try & please (too) many audiences you will definitely please some people some of the time (of course, there's always the people who refuse to be pleased whatever you do). Even if you restricted BaL to classical music (whatever that is) there is still the certainty that some people (possibly quite a lot of people) won't be pleased by the work being considered. People who don't like opera, or baroque (especially HIPP), or piano music, or Wagner, or Mozart, or etc etc.
Radio 3’s obligation is to the listeners who want to hear classical music, jazz, and world music. Popular music is not its business irrespective of the musical quality of the work in question. As I said before, Radio 2 and 6 Music don’t try to interest regular Radio3 listeners*, so why Radio3 trying to please their listeners**?
Also, I expect many R2 and 6 Music listeners like classical music as well as the stations’ specialist repertoire but (I guess)neither of them tries to please these listeners by playing classical music. So why is Radio3 doing the reverse?
*with classcal music
[ed.]** with their specialityLast edited by doversoul1; 27-06-15, 20:14.
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Originally posted by doversoul View PostAs I said before, Radio 2 and 6 Music don’t try to interest regular Radio3 listeners*, so why Radio3 trying to please their listeners**?
Now I count my blessings.
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Originally posted by Flosshilde View PostEven if you restricted BaL to classical music (whatever that is)
a) clearly there is no watertight definition according to which music is assigned either to one category - classical music - OR, on the other side of the 'barrier' - not-classical music.
nevertheless:
b) there is clearly some music which is indisputably classical music (Haydn's string quartets) and some which isn't (jazz standards)
c) out of interest: what aspect of Broadway musical theatre would fit ANY definition of classical music?
d) once all categories are swept away and music becomes just 'music', experience suggests that anything that would certainly be defined as classical music gets very short measure indeed. Think BBC 'Music Day' coordinated by the BBC 'Director of Music'.
In the Hadrian's Wall of Sound sequence (on the One Show), I managed to get a screen shot of a wind quintet by pausing the iPlayer. There was no sound (just a voiceover) and the image lasted for under 10 seconds. Otherwise what was there apart from Radio 3's usual programming (minus the evening concert)?
e) isn't this why people become very protective of the increasingly small space devoted to 'classical music (whatever that is)'?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 french frank View Postb) there is clearly some music which is indisputably classical music (Haydn's string quartets) and some which isn't (jazz standards)
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clive heath
Incidentally the Musical Director for the 1992 "Carousel" was Justin Brown who is now General Music Director of the Badisches Staatstheater Karlsruhe, Germany, and Music Director Laureate of the Alabama Symphony Orchestra in the United States, 6 seasons there. He recently released a Mahler 9 with the Badishers which was not that well received but he seems to be strong on new music.
Talking about classical singers and musicals there are those clips on you-tube of Lenny getting exasperated with José Carreras in "Maria"... " I wrote it!" whereas Sarah Vaughan in a kind of stylistically reverse shoe-in with "South Pacific" does OK on "Happy Talk" with the non-jazz orchestra.
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Carousel and Kiri te Kanawa: Guess the target audience (with no disrespect whatsoever to any of them)*.
If Radio3 were serious about interesting young (-er) people in classical music, and serious about musical being a suitable subject of BaL, they could have chosen something like Billy Elliot and discussed the difference and the similarities between classical music and non-classical music. Whilst I don’t fall into either (young/new) category, I’d have been more than happy to listen to it and my musical horizon would have been considerably widened.
What is the thinking behind it or is there any thinning at all? I am still hoping that Alan Davey had nothing to do with all this..
*I expect someone will tell me how many young people were in the audience of its recent performance. Ah well. I know I have preconceived ideas and all that.
[ed.] ** with the focus on…Last edited by doversoul1; 28-06-15, 10:03.
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