Originally posted by ahinton
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Women Composers' Thread/International Women's Day 2015 on R3
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Originally posted by doversoul View PostBut what did you expect? A thread about an event on the radio that is linked to a campaign, which WWD is, would be naturally about the issue. If only Radio 3 were more independently minded and scheduled a day of women composers irrespective of any social issues, we would certainly have talked about the music and would have been much happier. Until some people start saying that music can never be separated from social issues….
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Originally posted by jean View PostAdult behaviour, uninformed by everyday sexism.
Foolish of me, I know.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostYou said politics before; are you now adding social issues? Terminology is very important in debates of this kind...
jean
I didn’t stop there.
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Originally posted by doversoul View Postjean
I didn’t stop there.
The rest of your post seemed to be about your answer to your question.
But if you want my comment on that, I'd say that I'd prefer to think of IWD as a peg to hang some much-needed exposure for women composers on rather than as a 'campaigning' event with 'strings attached' (if that's what you mean by your 'no-string' reference).
Besides, this is a merged thread, and one of its original components doesn't mention IWD at all.
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Honoured Guest
Radio 3 had the good idea of broadcasting a wide-ranging contextual showcase day of music by female composers, many of them unfairly neglected, and International Women's Day 2015 (yesterday) was a very good day to choose to broadcast this special sequence of programming, particularly as it fell on a Sunday this year.
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostIt's like treading eggshells on this thread. When one person posts, another appears to get the wrong end of the stick. As has been pointed out earlier, it would be good to discuss the music.
This is good though.
anyway, how are the R3 schedules looking today for women composers, aside from COTW which is a tie in to yesterday?
Not that promising ?Last edited by teamsaint; 09-03-15, 16:14.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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Originally posted by Honoured Guest View PostRadio 3 had the good idea of broadcasting a wide-ranging contextual showcase day of music by female composers, many of them unfairly neglected, and International Women's Day 2015 (yesterday) was a very good day to choose to broadcast this special sequence of programming, particularly as it fell on a Sunday this year.
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Originally posted by jean View PostNo, but you asked me a question, which I attempted to answer.
The rest of your post seemed to be about your answer to your question.
But if you want my comment on that, I'd say that I'd prefer to think of IWD as a peg to hang some much-needed exposure for women composers on rather than as a 'campaigning' event with 'strings attached' (if that's what you mean by your 'no-string' reference).
Besides, this is a merged thread, and one of its original components doesn't mention IWD at all.
So would I, very much (re: IWD being just the peg), but that is, I think unrealistic, and that is why I wish this event had been on a different day, and just being a day of works by women composers (i.e. no-string). That should be a good enough peg.
As for the original thread titles, one did mention IWD. Ah well. Perhaps someone could start a thread with a title something like ‘Music Played on 8th March’.
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Well, if no-one else is going to talk about music, I'll start the ball rolling. Sunday evening's Live in Concert included Lili Boulanger's D'un matin de printemps . This was the Real McCoy. I would recommend anyone who hasn't heard it to access it on iPlayer. Just fast-forward through Katie Derham's interminable interviews and get to the music.
If only Lili had lived and worked for as long as Nadia, what a different musical world we might now live in.
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostWell, if no-one else is going to talk about music, I'll start the ball rolling. Sunday evening's Live in Concert included Lili Boulanger's D'un matin de printemps . This was the Real McCoy. I would recommend anyone who hasn't heard it to access it on iPlayer. Just fast-forward through Katie Derham's interminable interviews and get to the music.
If only Lili had lived and worked for as long as Nadia, what a different musical world we might now live in.
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