How are the cuts going to pan out in terms of British high art music? I see the Hallé's now in trouble as a second round of cuts - at local government level - are made. There's a brief blog about it here:
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Arguments to defend British orchestras, BBC Radio 3 and the BBC Proms, the great cornerstones of British musical high art, will hot up as the public expenditure cuts - deeper than anything ever attempted in Britain before - begin to bite.
It becomes increasingly difficult to defend tax-money spent on, say, a third oboe parping away at a Mahler symphony while old ladies on inadequate state pensions, shivering in poorly maintained public housing stock, have just had their meals-on-wheels cut. But the arguments have to be made.
British Orchestras & the Cuts
It becomes increasingly difficult to defend tax-money spent on, say, a third oboe parping away at a Mahler symphony while old ladies on inadequate state pensions, shivering in poorly maintained public housing stock, have just had their meals-on-wheels cut. But the arguments have to be made.
British Orchestras & the Cuts
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