Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben
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Radio 3 Schedule changes
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Andrew Slater's message 160 has suggested to me that Sam's butchery is akin to what's happened to a lot of non-fiction TV programmes these days, which makes them unwatchable for me. We begin with five minutes of soudbites and 'coming up next', then two minutes of actual programme, then more 'coming up next', then a recap of what they've done so far, and so on: TV for channel-hoppers, in fact. So splitting up a classical work into pop-song-length segments serves the same purpose, and, of course, does the source material the same disservice .
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Originally posted by smittims View PostAndrew Slater's message 160 has suggested to me that Sam's butchery is akin to what's happened to a lot of non-fiction TV programmes these days, which makes them unwatchable for me. We begin with five minutes of soudbites and 'coming up next', then two minutes of actual programme, then more 'coming up next', then a recap of what they've done so far, and so on: TV for channel-hoppers, in fact. So splitting up a classical work into pop-song-length segments serves the same purpose, and, of course, does the source material the same disservice .
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Originally posted by Andrew Slater View Post
Imagine the audience reaction if Radio 4 were to adopt a similar philosophy and chopped up all the afternoon plays in a week and broadcast a collection of segments from each one each day under the heading of Afternoon Play. There would be an outcry.
I think the answer has to be revolution, doesn't it? We need to take over the studios, and force adult programming on these timeserving suits.
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Originally posted by Master Jacques View Post
But they do precisely that in Radio 4's "Afternoon Drama" slot from 14:15 to 15:00. The majority of these things now are not self-contained plays, but serials, cut up into gobbets running one episode per week. The idea of broadcasting a whole play at once is as off-piste to R4, as the idea of a whole symphony is to Radio 3.
I think the answer has to be revolution, doesn't it? We need to take over the studios, and force adult programming on these timeserving suits.
When will R4 get a spoken/written word equivalent of Essential Classics - an act of a play(or, more likely, a few chunks from an act) some verses from a poem, a random chapter from a novel, interspersed with chat and ads?
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Originally posted by Master Jacques View PostI think the answer has to be revolution, doesn't it? We need to take over the studios, and force adult programming on these timeserving suits.
I take it as axiomatic that having a longer attention span is better than having a short one. There will always be people capable of sustained concentration, but the masses won't be and society will develop according to the inclinations of those who can.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
They point out sententiously that attention spans are now much shorter - and then ensure that attention spans gradually get shorter.
I take it as axiomatic that having a longer attention span is better than having a short one. There will always be people capable of sustained concentration, but the masses won't be and society will develop according to the inclinations of those who can.
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Originally posted by french frank View Post
They point out sententiously that attention spans are now much shorter - and then ensure that attention spans gradually get shorter.
I take it as axiomatic that having a longer attention span is better than having a short one. There will always be people capable of sustained concentration, but the masses won't be and society will develop according to the inclinations of those who can.
As an anecdotal sampler, about 20 years ago Desert Island Discs used to contain roughly 30% 3-minute pop songs to 70% quality music of all kinds, with symphonic music and opera well to the fore, curated under a questing presenter. Now the quotients are about 90% to 10%, with a brain-free presenter who appears manifestly uncomfortable when guests choose anything "intellectual".
And this show features supposedly alpha, leading members of society. It shows that the great majority of people - nudged continually by commercial pressure - choose to divide their music into "songs", rather than listen to longer stretches.
If you are suggesting that all this tends to aid the cause of authoritarian control of the many by the (very) few, I can't disagree with you.
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Originally posted by french frank View PostThey point out sententiously that attention spans are now much shorter - and then ensure that attention spans gradually get shorter.
I take it as axiomatic that having a longer attention span is better than having a short one. There will always be people capable of sustained concentration, but the masses won't be and society will develop according to the inclinations of those who can.
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Originally posted by Master Jacques View PostDon't you think the bird has already flown?
Originally posted by Master Jacques View PostIf you are suggesting that all this tends to aid the cause of authoritarian control of the many by the (very) few, I can't disagree with you.
Although those DID figures suggest the zombie mentality might just ignore social class. And if that is correct it could be a hopeful sign.
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 Master Jacques View Post
As an anecdotal sampler, about 20 years ago Desert Island Discs used to contain roughly 30% 3-minute pop songs to 70% quality music of all kinds, with symphonic music and opera well to the fore, curated under a questing presenter. Now the quotients are about 90% to 10%, with a brain-free presenter who appears manifestly uncomfortable when guests choose anything "intellectual".
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Originally posted by Master Jacques View Post
As an anecdotal sampler, about 20 years ago Desert Island Discs used to contain roughly 30% 3-minute pop songs to 70% quality music of all kinds, with symphonic music and opera well to the fore, curated under a questing presenter. Now the quotients are about 90% to 10%, with a brain-free presenter who appears manifestly uncomfortable when guests choose anything "intellectual".
I like and listen to mainly classical music, mainly by male Europeans like me, but unlike me, mostly dead. I do not feel superior to those who prefer the music of our time which is mainly songs, often chosen on DID because they evoke a memory rather than for their intrinsic musical quality. I grew up in the 60s with the 3-minute pop song, (some maybe even have been as long as 4 or 5 minutes) - Beatles, Sones Kinks etc. If I was on DID I would probably chose Buddy Holly's It Doesn't Matter Any More, the first record I ever bought, which turns out to be a great song (2 minutes five seconds duration) and which I love and enjoy as much now as I did sixty years ago and as much as any "quality" song by Schubert, Schumann, Wolf, Brahms, Mahler, Fauré, Weill, Eisler, Hahn, Shostakovich, Finzi, Gurney .. plus so many more.
I regret that I have not taken the trouble to get know very much of the modern output (including so-called world music) which my children (in their 40s) play. I love songs generally and cast my net wide as wide as I can but alas not as wide as I might like to: show and cabaret tunes, folk, the great jazz and blues vocalists, some country and western, eg Johnny Cash - especially the late American Recordings and Emmylou Harris, the great singer-songwriters: Bob Dylan, Leonard Cohen, Van Morrison, Joni Mitchell, Tom Waits, Richard Thompson, Lucinda Williams.
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Originally posted by Master Jacques View Post
But they do precisely that in Radio 4's "Afternoon Drama" slot from 14:15 to 15:00. The majority of these things now are not self-contained plays, but serials, cut up into gobbets running one episode per week. The idea of broadcasting a whole play at once is as off-piste to R4, as the idea of a whole symphony is to Radio 3.
I think the answer has to be revolution, doesn't it? We need to take over the studios, and force adult programming on these timeserving suits.
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Originally posted by gurnemanz View Post
I thought we did not use personal abuse on here.
I like and listen to mainly classical music, mainly by male Europeans like me, but unlike me, mostly dead. I do not feel superior to those who prefer the music of our time which is mainly songs, often chosen on DID because they evoke a memory rather than for their intrinsic musical quality. I grew up in the 60s with the 3-minute pop song, (some maybe even have been as long as 4 or 5 minutes) - Beatles, Sones Kinks etc. If I was on DID I would probably chose Buddy Holly's It Doesn't Matter Any More, the first record I ever bought, which turns out to be a great song (2 minutes five seconds duration) and which I love and enjoy as much now as I did sixty years ago and as much as any "quality" song by Schubert, Schumann, Wolf, Brahms, Mahler, Fauré, Weill, Eisler, Hahn, Shostakovich, Finzi, Gurney .. plus so many more.
I regret that I have not taken the trouble to get know very much of the modern output (including so-called world music) which my children (in their 40s) play. I love songs generally and cast my net wide as wide as I can but alas not as wide as I might like to: show and cabaret tunes, folk, the great jazz and blues vocalists, some country and western, eg Johnny Cash - especially the late American Recordings and Emmylou Harris, the great singer-songwriters: Bob Dylan, Leonard Cohen, Van Morrison, Joni Mitchell, Tom Waits, Richard Thompson, Lucinda Williams.
You can only do so much in a three-minute song, even if you're Finzi or Britten, whereas the sky's the limit in a half-hour symphony or two-hour opera. But - just as such diverse figures as Warhol and the poet/artist David Jones prophesied - "high art", with its complexities and ambiguities, is dead. Anglo/American society has accepted authoritarianism, while welcoming the equally conformist minstrel-protesters as an opiate to replace Christianity. Thus the slide of Radio 3 towards the "single song" culture, and a world in which anything longer than 3 minutes is thought "pretentious" or "intellectual".
As for insulting the current presenter of Desert Island Discs, I didn't name her; and as "brain-free" is obviously a metaphor, rather than a claim of fact, I'm not sure how to rephrase it without giving her credit for a professionalism which she doesn't possess. She simply reads out the lines her researchers have put together for her, and scarcely engages with the "guests" at all, on any meaningful level, unless she happens to like the ditties they've chosen. That's something of which you could never accuse even the oleaginous Plumley. Or am I being too "personal" again?
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