Originally posted by Nick Armstrong
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Radio 3 Schedule changes
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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 Ein Heldenleben View Post
Not only is he a classical enthusiast he had piano lessons at the inestimable Blackheath Conservatoire of Music and The Arts , sponsors a bursary for piano students there, is or was Chancellor of Trinity Laban Music and Arts College and financially supports one of the very few touring Big Bands in the UK.
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Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View Post
Not only is he a classical enthusiast he had piano lessons at the inestimable Blackheath Conservatoire of Music and The Arts , sponsors a bursary for piano students there, is or was Chancellor of Trinity Laban Music and Arts College and financially supports one of the very few touring Big Bands in the UK.
As a parallel to what MJ was saying: if R4 decided to drop The Archers and R3 thought it would be good for listening figures to grab it, that would take up a hefty slice of R3's drama budget which would then not be available for the regular R3 drama slot.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 DracoM View Post.............AND they've added a Jazz prog - Round Midnight - which has crushed the crucial radio-rhythm and very welcome 'Night Tracks' - WHY?
The thinking [Ha!] round this re-balancing of stuff is zany. V.unhappy here/.
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Originally posted by LMcD View Post
The only programmes that I now regularly listen to 'live' are 'Breakfast' (excluding Saturdays) and 'Night Tracks' followed by Soweto Kinch. There are a few others (Private Passions, JRR) up with which I catch via my TV or Sounds. It seems a lifetime ago that I would happily stay tuned for hours enjoying the more substantial - and more sensibly scheduled - works that were broadcast during most of daylight hours. I believe it was CD Masters that usually ended with a major work, leading me into The Lunchtime Concert and from there into the afternoon's offering.
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Originally posted by gurnemanz View Post
Under the old schedule I was in the habit of tuning in most days at 12 noon for CotW and lunchtime recital. I would then sometimes stick around in the afternoon, which I might not have tuned into per se. Since the removal of that 12 noon time juncture I have hardly tuned in at all, even for the uprooted CotW now in its new slot. The lack of the mid-day time junctures is for me a major drawback of the current random playlist arrangement. I note that Dichterliebe with James Newby and pianist James Baillieu is on this afternoon but no start time is given. I'd like to listen but may miss it for that reason.
Quite!
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Originally posted by antongould View Post
agreed OOO and anyway I didn’t dare go on there and say I enjoyed the VW episode ……….
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Originally posted by oddoneout View Post
I think if I hadn't had expectations of something different(should know better by now...) I would have liked it well enough. Playing complete pieces is a positive.
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Damian Thompson has a rant in the Spectator's (paywalled) 'The mutilation of Radio 3': "...reducing the serious presentation of classical music to the point where Radio 3 is little more than a Spotify playlist interrupted by disc-jockey burbling."
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