Originally posted by pastoralguy
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I like it, I like it not
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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 pastoralguy View PostPoint taken. But I do wonder what the alternative is. I've always believed that the BBC employ top people so what's the alternative to the current crop of presenters? And do we really want Bruckner's 8th Symphony in the morning? I, (genuinely!), wonder how many listeners have the time and concentration to devote their full attention at that time of the day.
String quartets by Haydn, Mendelssohn, Borodin, Schumann, Haydn Symphonies, Piano Sonatas by Haydn, Mozart, Beethoven, Schubert ... as well as individual, self-contained shorter pieces. Is there any objection to this? If so, this Thread provides an opportunity.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Like - the idea the station exists at all .... but it is, surely, between a rock
and a hard place .... if the early morning shows played full Bruckner/Mahler symphonies would anyone hereabouts listen or switch off and play their current favourite of the 37 recordings they have ... ???
Also like it is there as an alternative to / move on from CFM so helps, in a small way to keep a love of classical music alive ....
Don’t like - the endlessly repeated trailers and the seeming fear that to play any other symphony than Hayden/Mozart or Prokofiev 1 will destroy the morning schedule .....
and did I mention Skellers ....
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I would not like wall to wall Mahler. As someone who is wordy and conscious that in today's Twittersphere many consider that brief is best, I have never seen a reasoned argument put forward for symphonies of never ending length. There is, as some might say, a "disconnect". Maybe it is that the rot hasn't quite yet set in due to the absence of a Plain Music Society?
But as a matter of interest, french frank, what would you like instead of, say, Essential Classics?
A daytime Through The Night?
Concerts by a range of newly formed and fully funded BBC orchestras?
Daytime plays?
I am not sure that I am entirely clear.
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Originally posted by antongould View PostYes but 10.5 years later they have all bought 18.7 further versions ....
But this is irrelevant, isn't it? Why, suddenly, are we no longer to be given more than the occasional piece lasting 18 mins? If people can't give it their full attention, how does it stop them doing anything else they have to do?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 ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostWhy do you cite Bruckner 8th, pasto? I think that there is a danger of an artificial polarisation between "short pieces" and Bruckner #8 (or Mahler #3). There are plenty of full-length works lasting half the time of the Bruckner. The number of listeners who had time and attention at that time of the morning wasn't a problem on 2nd January 1979 - the date I found when searching for a particular evening programme from that time: the breakfast time programme for that day included full works lasting up to half-an-hour, and after nine, even a little longer. Why is this now regarded as impractical when it wasn't forty years ago? And - if CFM is offering the "bits and bobs" type of programming at that time, why not cater for the few (if it is indeed few) listeners who can so "devote their full attention at that time of day"?
String quartets by Haydn, Mendelssohn, Borodin, Schumann, Haydn Symphonies, Piano Sonatas by Haydn, Mozart, Beethoven, Schubert ... as well as individual, self-contained shorter pieces. Is there any objection to this? If so, this Thread provides an opportunity.
I'd maybe view the ( perhaps unwelcome) change as a move from old fashioned paternalistic motivations to ones based more in professional arts management, which sees ( and tell me if I am wrong here......) a substantial part of its remit as using its reach to develop an audience, even if that audience doesn't know it wants to develop.
Likes : Record review/BaL, even the twofers. Afternoon concert. Evening Concert. Anything that helps me learn more . Some of the presenters. ( I'm trying really hard to get along with Ron Shafferty).
Don't like: The absence of Discovering Music. Too many of the presenters. The crassness of Breakfast and EC most of the time. Not nearly enough contemporary or late C20 music in the daytime. Deeply predictable programming of major works.I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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I very rarely listen live.almost always I-player.
Like
Some evening concerts,lunchtime concerts,TTN,choral evensong,COTW
Dislike
Breakfast,essential classics,in tune,even BAL gets on my nerves these days so I only listen if it's a work that interests me.
It's just occurred to me that I hardly ever listen at weekends.
TTN 24/7 would suit me fine.
Wish
Interpretations on record would return.
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Originally posted by Lat-Literal View PostI would not like wall to wall Mahler.
Originally posted by Lat-Literal View PostBut as a matter of interest, french frank, what would you like instead of, say, Essential Classics?
On the whole, I've always rather avoided 'prescriptions' of this kind. It usually leads to disputes - but as you asked me nicely …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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Like
iPlayer and specialist programmes, Hear and Now, Jazz, Early Music, World Music, Late Junction. And in the mainstream programmes, TTN, Concerts, there is much to like, but it does require some ferreting - e.g. Monteverdi Vespers on TTN last Saturday.
Presenters Alyn Shipton, Max Reinhardt, Jonathan Swain, Simon Heighes ( I never thought I would appreciate the edicts of the Council of Trente).
R3 does inform and educate - me, at least.
In Tune Mix Tape, Words and Music.
Generally, R3 provides 90% of my music listening time.
Dislike
Since most of my listening is on iPlayer, I can't comment on the mainstream programmes. Except that Breakfast can be good, but then there may be a loud bombastic orchestral piece that has me reaching for the off switch.
Tom Service.Last edited by Quarky; 28-02-18, 05:00.
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Thirty-nine years might well be "the better part of half-a-century ago" (with or without the ) - but so was The Hitch-Hikers' Guide to the Galaxy, and they're bringing that back!
And the new-fashioned anti-paternalist motivations aren't using a reach to develop an audience - the reach is getting shorter as the audience numbers fall. That's (for me) the important bit - the alienation of the once devoted* audience is not being replaced by greater numbers of eager new listeners: if it were, if the Rajars showed an increase in numbers for the pre-noon programmes which then spilled over into the later schedules, it would be selfish and churlish to decry the happy-clappy fare. As the listener numbers drop, it's not unreasonable to firmly and politely request something more substantial - especially if the same sort of programming is available for those who prefer it elsewhere.
(* = I was going to describe it as a "once regular" audience, but as we're discussing breakfast-time broadcasting ... )[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by french frank View PostWell, as the saying goes, you could always switch off
I would do away with the idea of a 3-hour CD programme. Essential Classics was the first programme ever to introduce that on Radio 3. I might have a first programme that was CDs only, but with at least one full-length (30-40 mins) work, and the shorter works a mix of v short to medium long. And if I were thinking entirely of myself, there would be no non-classical works (musicals, jazz, Ivor Cutler or whatever novelty someone thought up). There would be no guests (though I might bring back the old Artist of the Week programme with a distinguished classical performer being interviewed about their life and career). Presentation would be concise and informed. No listener contributions. After that there could be a 'recital' - not necessarily an actual recording, but a choice of works that might well form a recital programme. Or works that were connected in some way.
On the whole, I've always rather avoided 'prescriptions' of this kind. It usually leads to disputes - but as you asked me nicely …
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Originally posted by french frank View PostSo they can play Mahler 6 or Mahler 2
But this is irrelevant, isn't it? Why, suddenly, are we no longer to be given more than the occasional piece lasting 18 mins? If people can't give it their full attention, how does it stop them doing anything else they have to do?
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