Originally posted by oddoneout
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Radio 3 Schedule changes
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Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View Post
It’s interesting isn’t it ? Does its eternal unrepeatability make it in some ways more precious than a work that can be recreated ? Or is the new art in producing your own solo ?Last edited by Serial_Apologist; 26-04-24, 16:03.
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Just listened to Feedback on Radio Four - did you know you can iisten to a programme you've missed literally at any time* on Sounds? - and CR3's entirerly expected self-defence.
On the other hand, I learned that The Now Show has been axed from Radio 4.
You win some, you lose some.
* for a month
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Originally posted by Master Jacques View Post... and there you hit the most damning criticism of Radio 3's increasing inanity - the almost total disregard of modern art composers*, except when it comes to an hour or two of commissions broadcast once from the Proms. The station simply is not doing its job, in any department worth mentioning.
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* And no, that doesn't include Max Richter, Karl Jenkins and the usual suspects touting shamelessly derivative film and tv scores
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Originally posted by kernelbogey View PostJust listened to Feedback on Radio Four - did you know you can iisten to a programme you've missed literally at any time* on Sounds? - and CR3's entirerly expected self-defence.
On the other hand, I learned that The Now Show has been axed from Radio 4.
You win some, you lose some.
* for a month
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Originally posted by kernelbogey View PostJust listened to Feedback on Radio Fourmore, sorry, to get new listeners who (co)incidentally will boost ratings.
But he showed no sign of having any vision whatsoever of what role Radio 3 should fulfil: it should be distinctive, it should get listeners listening longer (so that they get more for their licence fee), the speech programmes in the evening aren't getting big enough audiences so shove them off to R4.What next? Not enough people are listening to the Sunday drama? Drop it and give them another cheapo concert ragbag?
The vision sounds like: Get more listeners, get them to listen longer and keep it all as cheap as possible. Dropping the two speech programmes will certainly save a bob or two.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 PostJust listened to Feedback on Radio Four - did you know you can iisten to a programme you've missed literally at any time* on Sounds? - and CR3's entirerly expected self-defence.
On the other hand, I learned that The Now Show has been axed from Radio 4.
You win some, you lose some.
* for a month
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Originally posted by french frank View Post
Yes ... It seems to me to be a mistake to compare R3 with Classic FM: it's too easy to show that it isn't like it. But it gives away the show a bit to highlight the fact that FNIMN fans from R2 are delighted to find they can now listen to it on R3. Why was it necessary to pick up what R2 had dropped? To getmore, sorry, to get new listeners who (co)incidentally will boost ratings.
But he showed no sign of having any vision whatsoever of what role Radio 3 should fulfil: it should be distinctive, it should get listeners listening longer (so that they get more for their licence fee), the speech programmes in the evening aren't getting big enough audiences so shove them off to R4.What next? Not enough people are listening to the Sunday drama? Drop it and give them another cheapo concert ragbag?
The vision sounds like: Get more listeners, get them to listen longer and keep it all as cheap as possible. Dropping the two speech programmes will certainly save a bob or two.
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Originally posted by LMcD View Post
Does one pay a licence fee if one doesn't have a TV set or watch iPlayer?
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Has Jools Holland been told to constantly remind us how much he likes “classical music”? I see there is precisely one classical choice on his desert island discs for example. He is an engaging presenter but not really a classical enthusiast - he’s a jazz specialist. Nothing wrong with that but I don’t understand why his programme is on a prime time Saturday slot. The problem with the obsession with ratings is that it alienates existing listeners.
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I don't quite see how what appears to be a steady reduction in the number of what one might call substantial musical items will increase overall listening. It may encourage more people may dip in and out more often, thus boosting listener numbers, but it may also discourage those who have been happy to listen for longer when more substantial musical fare is offered..
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Originally posted by Philidor View PostHas Jools Holland been told to constantly remind us how much he likes “classical music”? I see there is precisely one classical choice on his desert island discs for example. He is an engaging presenter but not really a classical enthusiast - he’s a jazz specialist. Nothing wrong with that but I don’t understand why his programme is on a prime time Saturday slot. The problem with the obsession with ratings is that it alienates existing listeners.
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Originally posted by Master Jacques View Post
Like other contributors here, as well as James Conlon, I think you're missing out by dismissing the plot of El trovador so airily, which is a pity. Plausibility is irrelevant to archetypal drama such as this: we might just as well find the plot of Oedipus "silly", because he takes so long for the penny to drop, as to the identity of the richly-dressed personage he's killed at the crossroads.
Archetypal drama doesn't play by televisual rules. I don't know any reputable opera critic who has dismissed Cammarano's libretto as poor: Julian Budden certainly does no such thing in his classic, three-volume study of the composer, praising its brevity, directness and lack of padding. As with Greek drama, most of the significant action takes place off stage, even the final execution of the hero.
'If Verdi hadn't done quite nicely out of opera, thank you, he could have made a living from second-hand car sales: chief requirement, the ability to package and deliver dubious material with absolute conviction. And in all the core Verdi repertory there is no material more dubious than Il Trovatore, with its risibly contrived plot, dramatically outrageous back-narrations ('Tell me the story of how Grandma got burnt at the stake, mother', 'Well, son, it was like this . . .'), and its forgetful gypsy who throws her baby on the bonfire by mistake (easily done, of course). But Trovatore survives - indeed, flourishes - in performance because it transcends its own absurdity, swept forward by a sense of urgency and unremitting tunes.'
Maybe it's best to take the absurdity and run with it. David McVicar, who has said that 'on a bad day I think ‘Il Trovatore’ is one of the stupidest operas ever written' engaged with the work on its own terms and staged an acclaimed production at the Met.
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Originally posted by Philidor View PostHas Jools Holland been told to constantly remind us how much he likes “classical music”? I see there is precisely one classical choice on his desert island discs for example. He is an engaging presenter but not really a classical enthusiast - he’s a jazz specialist. Nothing wrong with that but I don’t understand why his programme is on a prime time Saturday slot. The problem with the obsession with ratings is that it alienates existing listeners."...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
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Originally posted by Retune View Post
I don't think recognising the dramatic defects of this work need be a barrier to appreciation and enjoyment, because the music and the overall effect completely transcend the clunky, convoluted melodrama of the plot. The offstage flashbacks at the beginning are more Basil Exposition than Sophocles, but at least they mean we don't have to see the whole gypsy kidnap / baby barbecue thing acted out (though I suppose there must be some avant garde productions that insist on giving us the gory details). Michael White, critic and librettist:
'If Verdi hadn't done quite nicely out of opera, thank you, he could have made a living from second-hand car sales: chief requirement, the ability to package and deliver dubious material with absolute conviction. And in all the core Verdi repertory there is no material more dubious than Il Trovatore, with its risibly contrived plot, dramatically outrageous back-narrations ('Tell me the story of how Grandma got burnt at the stake, mother', 'Well, son, it was like this . . .'), and its forgetful gypsy who throws her baby on the bonfire by mistake (easily done, of course). But Trovatore survives - indeed, flourishes - in performance because it transcends its own absurdity, swept forward by a sense of urgency and unremitting tunes.'
Maybe it's best to take the absurdity and run with it. David McVicar, who has said that 'on a bad day I think ‘Il Trovatore’ is one of the stupidest operas ever written' engaged with the work on its own terms and staged an acclaimed production at the Met.
The parallels with Greek drama are obvious, and well-handled in an opera which is all about what happened twenty years ago, where events have been variously interpreted to take on a life of their own. That, my lords, is the whole point. There is nothing clumsy about the brutally, uncomfortably swift exposition. It is wild, feral tragedy at all points. I'm sorry to have to repeat myself, but anyone who knows anything about the matter of writing for opera (which Mr. White doesn't) is going to recognise the great strengths of Cammarano's text.
Another frivolous critic once remarked that "there isn't even a proper love duet", which tells us that these chaps are after something entirely conventional, comfortable and predictable. Like almost every moment in the opera, the lead up to what promises to be the "love scene" is broken by yet another messenger revealing yet another slice of catastrophe. In a Greek-style drama about the archetypal patterns of life, this circularity is mesmerising.
Il trovatore is a great opera - one of the greatest - not in spite of the text, but because words and music are in rare harmony. We should cultivate the humility to throw away our snobbish, silly baggage about "well-made plays", plausibility and TV realism, rather than criticising it for not being something it doesn't set out to be. Appealing to such dubious "authorities" as White and McVicar cuts no dramatic mustard.Last edited by Master Jacques; 27-04-24, 16:49.
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