What's exasperating is that this is sold as expanding choice, providing more value to licence fee payers. At the same time they're offering less/no choice to others. It's quantity over quality and they actually claim that the more time people spend listening the better value they (i.e. listeners!) are getting. Never mind the quality, feel the width.
Radio 3 online-only 'chill' service to go ahead without public interest test
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This is indeed depressing and a triumph of marketing, how can we 'sell' classical music. The pernicious effect of this way of seeing music solely in terms of the [supposed] effect it has on our 'wellbeing' is that anything that doesn't have a 'chill' effect is in some way difficult or too modern or just not very good, in a sense it has failed to fulfil its ultimate purpose of relaxing us. So much great music therefore simply fails to make the cut - Mahler? Too long. Schoenberg? No tunes! RVW? Some lovely bits but not the depressing stuff please! No Bartok, Shostakovich, Wagner, let alone anything post-WW2.
A radio station that might make one curious, reassured, happy, sad, irritated, inspired, cranky or occasionally euphoric, and all within one hour, is clearly so very 20th century. I click on a link and I will become chilled because that's what it says on the packet. Instant gratification.
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How about an online-only R3 'classic' service? They have an enormous archive of high-quality programming that we normally have no access to. Multi-movement works played all the way through, challenging repertoire, intelligent discussion, and other daring Reithian concepts that defined R3 before the rot set in. Why not start streaming it, or ideally make more of it available on demand? Leave the choice of mood as an exercise for the listener (though I can pretty much guarantee that levels of frustration and irritability would be reduced in some of us).
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Originally posted by kindofblue View PostThis is indeed depressing and a triumph of marketing, how can we 'sell' classical music. The pernicious effect of this way of seeing music solely in terms of the [supposed] effect it has on our 'wellbeing' is that anything that doesn't have a 'chill' effect is in some way difficult or too modern or just not very good, in a sense it has failed to fulfil its ultimate purpose of relaxing us. So much great music therefore simply fails to make the cut - Mahler? Too long. Schoenberg? No tunes! RVW? Some lovely bits but not the depressing stuff please! No Bartok, Shostakovich, Wagner, let alone anything post-WW2.
A radio station that might make one curious, reassured, happy, sad, irritated, inspired, cranky or occasionally euphoric, and all within one hour, is clearly so very 20th century. I click on a link and I will become chilled because that's what it says on the packet. Instant gratification.
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Originally posted by kindofblue View PostThis is indeed depressing and a triumph of marketing, how can we 'sell' classical music. The pernicious effect of this way of seeing music solely in terms of the [supposed] effect it has on our 'wellbeing' is that anything that doesn't have a 'chill' effect is in some way difficult or too modern or just not very good, in a sense it has failed to fulfil its ultimate purpose of relaxing us. So much great music therefore simply fails to make the cut - Mahler? Too long. Schoenberg? No tunes! RVW? Some lovely bits but not the depressing stuff please! No Bartok, Shostakovich, Wagner, let alone anything post-WW2.
A radio station that might make one curious, reassured, happy, sad, irritated, inspired, cranky or occasionally euphoric, and all within one hour, is clearly so very 20th century. I click on a link and I will become chilled because that's what it says on the packet. Instant gratification.
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Let's say that Radio 3 Chill proves popular with listeners and grabs some of Classic FM's and Radio 2's audience, and also Radio 3's audience, to the tune (no pun intended) of, say, 2.5 million listeners. That is all well and good. However, a "successful" station like that will probably secure a decent chunk of the BBC's radio budget in the years to come. To take a pessimistic slant, who knows if, in a decade or two, Radio 3 proper might have its funding reduced as "there is no longer the demand" for a niche station catering to niche interests. R3 could even be elbowed aside. That might be far-fetched, but this is a country that has seen the Arts founder under the tender care of 12 culture secretaries in the last 14 years.
Perhaps Radio Chill might be better described as Radio Opium?
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Originally posted by Hitch View PostTo take a pessimistic slant, who knows if, in a decade or two, Radio 3 proper might have its funding reduced as "there is no longer the demand" for a niche station catering to niche interests. R3 could even be elbowed aside. That might be far-fetched ...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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