Here’s my 2023 Survey of Classical Music on Radio 3, the 15th I’ve undertaken. 2023 was a very depressing year for me personally and seeing the state of R3 hasn’t exactly improved things. The R3 website remains a total & utter embarrassment. The obsession with arrangements of works, still shows no sign of abating, as is the utter obsession with being diverse. Whilst some of this is positive in bringing a handful of notable composers into the spotlight it some exceptionally fine & important composers are being all but ignored due as they don’t fit in with the R3 diversity agenda or Classic FM imitation one either.
The day’s broadcast is now almost completely filled with nothing but presenter driven chunk playlists. The percentage of full & larger scale works broadcast has fallen to abysmal levels. This is shown for example by the total number of complete symphonies broadcast, which has fallen by around 25% from 10 years ago. Whilst the number of works/chunks broadcast yearly has increased by nearly 30% from 10 years ago. I wonder if management/presenters have competitions to see just how many chunks can be squeezed into one programme.
Another very noticeable observation is the increasing narrowing of the variety of works by individual composers. Take West Side Story, Candide & the Wonderful Town Overture away from the Bernstein total and you’re left with a handful of occurrences of anything else. Around 2/3rds of Gluck is Orpheus & Euridice, around a quarter of Tchaikovsky is the 3 ballets, with The Nutcracker account for half of that. In fact of the R3 warhorse pieces, which I monitor, a majority had record numbers of broadcasts, which has not occurred in such numbers before. As for the Christmas programming, it was horrendous and appears to have begun earlier than usual. It really did look like blatant ClassicFM imitation. Having said that, Classic FM’s choice of music was more wide-ranging.
As usual, a list of all composers with 50 or more pieces/chunks broadcast is in the thread below. As last year the *against a composer indicates the highest number of pieces/chunks by that composer since I began my survey in 2009, The increase in increasingly small chunks this year has resulted in quite a few composers having record numbers of bits & pieces broadcast since 2009. If there are any composers not in this category that you would like to know the figures for, then as usual please let me know.
The Symphony Survey results will follow tomorrow (I hope).
The day’s broadcast is now almost completely filled with nothing but presenter driven chunk playlists. The percentage of full & larger scale works broadcast has fallen to abysmal levels. This is shown for example by the total number of complete symphonies broadcast, which has fallen by around 25% from 10 years ago. Whilst the number of works/chunks broadcast yearly has increased by nearly 30% from 10 years ago. I wonder if management/presenters have competitions to see just how many chunks can be squeezed into one programme.
Another very noticeable observation is the increasing narrowing of the variety of works by individual composers. Take West Side Story, Candide & the Wonderful Town Overture away from the Bernstein total and you’re left with a handful of occurrences of anything else. Around 2/3rds of Gluck is Orpheus & Euridice, around a quarter of Tchaikovsky is the 3 ballets, with The Nutcracker account for half of that. In fact of the R3 warhorse pieces, which I monitor, a majority had record numbers of broadcasts, which has not occurred in such numbers before. As for the Christmas programming, it was horrendous and appears to have begun earlier than usual. It really did look like blatant ClassicFM imitation. Having said that, Classic FM’s choice of music was more wide-ranging.
As usual, a list of all composers with 50 or more pieces/chunks broadcast is in the thread below. As last year the *against a composer indicates the highest number of pieces/chunks by that composer since I began my survey in 2009, The increase in increasingly small chunks this year has resulted in quite a few composers having record numbers of bits & pieces broadcast since 2009. If there are any composers not in this category that you would like to know the figures for, then as usual please let me know.
The Symphony Survey results will follow tomorrow (I hope).
Comment