Originally posted by cloughie
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BBC Music Day
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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 PostNo, they were a way into classical music for a lot of people. But the people who had no interest squawked so long (you should have seen the Radio 2 messageboards) they finally won the day when they got a controller who agreed with them because his main interests are sport and popular music. But, in any case, what music on Radio 2 do you like?
I don't listen to radio 2 much (if at all)
Looking here http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio2/programmes/a-z there are a couple of things I wouldn't turn off in the car but wouldn't make a special effort to listen.
But (and i'm guessing here) that the kind of "easy listening" stuff that it used to play is probably catered for in better ways on commercial radio.
I think times have changed and the days when listening to a bit of "light classical" music on radio 2 would be a "way in" to other music are gone.
People use radio in different ways.
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Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostI think times have changed and the days when listening to a bit of "light classical" music on radio 2 would be a "way in" to other music are gone.
People use radio in different ways.
I think your guess may be wrong: here's a view of typical Saga radio programming. It's Radio 2's programmes that are indistinguishable from commercial radio.
(Link corrected)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 PostIt's your opinion, but we shall never know because mainstream BBC services don't play classical music, light or heavy. It's all been cleared out. It is the fact that classical music is excluded from the musical mainstream that renders the argument that 'music is just music', 'people like many different kinds of music and don't make any distinction between genres' so patently untrue.
I think your guess may be wrong: here's a view of typical Saga radio programming. It's Radio 2's programmes that are indistinguishable from commercial radio.
(Link corrected)
I'm not sure that (as with music education) that "genre" based approaches are best at all.
But, as you say, that's my opinion.
now back to orchestration BUT is it "Classical" ? , personally I couldn't give a toss even though the things i'm working on will be played by one of the most mainstream "Classical" ensembles in the UK.
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Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostI'm not sure that (as with music education) that "genre" based approaches are best at all.
But, as you say, that's my opinion.
Originally posted by MrGongGong View Postnow back to orchestration BUT is it "Classical" ? , personally I couldn't give a toss even though the things i'm working on will be played by one of the most mainstream "Classical" ensembles in the UK.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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I've been scouring the BBC website, without success, to try and find some sort of statement to tell me what the 'idea' or 'aims' of Music Day are (or were).
is it to allow people for one day of the year to hear some live music for free ? is it to encourage people to participate in 'music-making' of whatever kind ?
I'm quite sure some kind of 'music-making' takes place in every region of Britain every day of the year, I don't feel I need a special Day to alert me to this fact (if that was an aim).
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thanks
"a UK-wide celebration of everything we love about music with the aim of bringing people from different generations and communities together"
nice and wide and vague. I think I was basically right with - "to allow people for one day of the year to hear some live music for free"
(p.s. where is that seaside venue in the top photograph ?)
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Originally posted by french frank View PostThey'll play most things these days
Karl Jenkins's Adiemus, Blokefest
Sara Mohr-Pietsch looks ahead to 'Blokefest', where men gather together in the Wiltshire countryside to enjoy a long weekend of choral singing and male bonding. Her choral classic is Karl Jenkins's chart topping Adiemus.
Mind you, you have to love these quaint rural euphemisms.
One thing I know is that there is likely to be a resounding click at Caliban Towers around 3.59pm... Because Choral Evensong sounds from the Choir thread to be a bit of alright So to be fair to R3, something for everyone...."...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 french frank View PostI'm not saying it is or isn't. I'm saying that the exclusion of 'classical music' (by which I mean the core repertoire) from the BBC's mainstream services is genre-based.
But that maybe reflects the way in which 'classical music' isn't 'mainstream' anymore ?
I'm not sure that any music really is these days, even the multiple genres of 'popular' music?
There are many musics that are almost completely ignored by the BBC (as many of us know).
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Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostThere are many musics that are almost completely ignored by the BBC (as many of us know).
As for my point about 'exclusion', for the second year running BBC Four had nothing but a series of programmes about pop music (plus a news programme at the beginning).
BBC Two, now BBC Two I'll grant you: a showing of the film "The Great Caruso" with Mario Lanza. Otherwise we had Radio 3, in a somewhat more diluted form than usual.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 PostI don't think there are (m)any which are in any way comparable with Western classical music in terms of the breadth and variety of the repertoire accumulated over 800 years and currently performed in at least four continents.
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(I'm NOT suggesting the BBC doesn't broadcast Bach or anything like that !)
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Originally posted by french frank View PostI don't think there are (m)any which are in any way comparable with Western classical music in terms of the breadth and variety of the repertoire accumulated over 800 years and currently performed in at least four continents.
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Originally posted by aeolium View PostLeaving aside the point about the music being currently performed in at least four continents (which classical shares with popular music and is just a comment on its popularity), I think there is a great deal that we in the West do not know about the much more extensive traditions of for instance Chinese music, or music from the Middle East. It's a shame when we are exposed - commercially and through the BBC - to so much of Western music that we still know so little of these other traditions.
(I tried to say something like this recently and was taken to task for linguistic nonsense)
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