Originally posted by smittims
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Radio 3 Schedule changes
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Originally posted by Pulcinella View Post
The “problem” is a old as broadcasting. Mass media inevitably dumb down - even at its height Radio 3 made the sort of intellectual demands that a decent O level literature or music student could comfortably cope with. To have produced programmes only understandable by undergraduates would have reduced the potential audience even further.
It’s much worse in TV of course where as a former current affairs colleague put it “you spend all day becoming an instant expert on Iran and then write a script that would comfortably fit in the Daily Mirror.”
Now of course Radio 3 , outside the Sunday Feature , makes no intellectual demands at all - it’s all predigested. And the infiltration of light music , film music , music that’s there because it allows a few producers to flatter themselves they are righting centuries of social injustice - that’s what I call dumbing down.
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Originally posted by smittims View PostYes, instead of denying the accusation, he tries to parry it with a rhetorical question' why would I want to do that?' . Well,Sam, you'd want to please your bosses in the BBC who in turn want to convince the government that the BBC is sufficiently 'entertaining'.
I was pleased to see this article. It shows him on the defensive; if the Times thinks it's worth an interview, then we aren't just a bunch of cranks who can be ignored.
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“It’s very easy to use that ludicrous phrase ‘dumbing down’, but nobody ever really defines what it means, it’s just an insult."
As I have pointed out previously, that has been said before and is an indication of total ignorance. No less an authority than the OED* has defined it: "The action of making something simpler or less intellectually challenging, esp. in order to make it appeal to a broader audience."
In the US it dates back to the 1920s and the OED's first recorded example is 1995 in - the Daily Telegraph.
There is a fundamental dishonesty in saying that Friday Night Is Music Night is not like anything on Classic FM. No, it was like Radio 2 - music for the broad audience. The old ploy: pick out something which is not like CFM and use it as 'evidence' that R3 is not like CFM. Where is the explanation for wrecking schedules which have typified R3 for 50-60 years and replacing them with 'broad audience' 3-hour presenter-led sequences? Where is the explanation for removing four of the weekday lunchtime concerts? Where is the explanation for removing a Radio 3 'live' concert and replacing it with a Radio 2 concert? Why don't you just admit you aren't allowed enough money to run a respectable cultural network?
*OED = Oxford English Dictionary, Mr Jackson.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 kernelbogey View Post"the best place to hear unique recordings of live music making....".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 Post“It’s very easy to use that ludicrous phrase ‘dumbing down’, but nobody ever really defines what it means, it’s just an insult."
As I have pointed out previously, that has been said before and is an indication of total ignorance. No less an authority than the OED* has defined it: "The action of making something simpler or less intellectually challenging, esp. in order to make it appeal to a broader audience."
In the US it dates back to the 1920s and the OED's first recorded example is 1995 in - the Daily Telegraph.
There is a fundamental dishonesty in saying that Friday Night Is Music Night is not like anything on Classic FM. No, it was like Radio 2 - music for the broad audience. The old ploy: pick out something which is not like CFM and use it as 'evidence' that R3 is not like CFM. Where is the explanation for wrecking schedules which have typified R3 for 50-60 years and replacing them with 'broad audience' 3-hour presenter-led sequences? Where is the explanation for removing four of the weekday lunchtime concerts? Where is the explanation for removing a Radio 3 'live' concert and replacing it with a Radio 2 concert? Why don't you just admit you aren't allowed enough money to run a respectable cultural network?
*OED = Oxford English Dictionary, Mr Jackson.
He’s clearly up for a scrap.
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Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View Post
All very good points - Why don’t you offer to interview him for the forum ?
He’s clearly up for a scrap.
Sam Jackson is just blaming the messengers.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 Ein Heldenleben View Post
All very good points - Why don’t you offer to interview him for the forum ?
He’s clearly up for a scrap.
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Originally posted by kernelbogey View Post
Upthread someone has said Feedback on R4 Thursday will be about R3 changes, IIRC. It's so long since I listened to it I can't remember how it works. Could we jam their lines with calls? (Image of ladies frantically trying to plug jackplugs into a telephone switchboard ).
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Originally posted by Andrew Slater View Post
I'm afraid not; comments have to be submitted in advance. (I could give them some feedback on their heading - is it perhaps missing something?)
It's just snobbery. It's nothing like Classic FM. We’re doing something utterly different [What are you doing, if it's not a rude question?].
Often it’s snobbery against commercial radio [in reality, many people think CFM does it better than R3].
We should never do things just because it’s what other people might want. We have to do what is right. [And in the words of Pope's Essay on Man: 'Whatever is, is right.'] A feeble response from CR3.
I see R3's Facebook page is awash with criticisms, though largely swamped by the R3 adverts. And here's another fantastic R3 prog coming up ...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 Post
What will be interesting is whether there are any reasons given for some of these keys changes.
We should never do things just because it’s what other people might want. We have to do what is right. [And in the words of Pope's Essay on Man: 'Whatever is, is right.'] A feeble response from CR3.
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Originally posted by Andrew Slater View Postas it's in a separate paragraph, I suppose it could be construed to apply to anything.
I'm compiling a questionnaire ('Radio 3 Feedback') for the controller with preamble, which in time-honoured way can be copied to several other BBC dignitaries.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 Post
I was once booked to do a Today interview along with RW. Waited by the phone until the programme ended and then rang to find out what had happened: RW couldn't make and they couldn't do a one-sided interview. Famous BBC balance.
Sam Jackson is just blaming the messengers.
Can’t stand the Today programme …
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Originally posted by Andrew Slater View Post
I think that last remark was meant to be about "Rule, Britannia!", rather than the station as a whole, but as it's in a separate paragraph, I suppose it could be construed to apply to anything.
* except in Beethoven’s excellent piano variations on it .
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Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View PostWhat they meant was interviewing you wouldn’t be as interesting as a row.
I think they regarded it as part of their role to 'engage' with listeners but not to concede any points. Except in the case of Alan Davey who agreed with the point about single movements not being very R3-like and he would 'see about it'. But we all 'saw about' it too. Zilch. If only one could get them to be honest about why it was necessary to play short pieces, to avoid a whole symphonies and concertos outside concert programmes. Tell us who they're pandering to?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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