Well, I still wonder what those who hate it now would do to promote a present-day Radio 3, as an intelligent, all-around, artistically, culturally and musical aware station. The problem with concentrating on Classical Music almost exclusively is that it is now in serious competition with high-quality streaming services, Berlin DCH, Medici tv etc etc....
So I think you have to try to promote it somehow - catchily, why not...?
("Passionate Minds" has a ring and a resonance to it for me; "Thoughtful introverts" really does sound like a satirical comedy creation...
Growing up with Radio 3 in the 70s, programmes like Critics Forum, Six Continents, the amazing Radio plays often created by poets like Ted Hughes and Peter Redgrove... were just as important to me as the music. And New Music "Music in Our Time", which often went out on a weekday afternoon, was also a big part of that too. How many here listen to the Proms Premieres?
So the editing of the station will always be a problem of choices, even though most of us can agree about the poor quality of presentation on the TV Proms, for example, or the superfluous shallowness of tweets, instant comments and fragmentary programming....
There's still much good musical programming available from afternoon and evening concerts (and accessible more or less anytime you want); but the competition of such from elsewhere has put a potentially high-quality public service under lot of pressure...
Whoa! Gotta rescue the Guardian and the Gramophone from the thunder quick....
So I think you have to try to promote it somehow - catchily, why not...?
("Passionate Minds" has a ring and a resonance to it for me; "Thoughtful introverts" really does sound like a satirical comedy creation...
Growing up with Radio 3 in the 70s, programmes like Critics Forum, Six Continents, the amazing Radio plays often created by poets like Ted Hughes and Peter Redgrove... were just as important to me as the music. And New Music "Music in Our Time", which often went out on a weekday afternoon, was also a big part of that too. How many here listen to the Proms Premieres?
So the editing of the station will always be a problem of choices, even though most of us can agree about the poor quality of presentation on the TV Proms, for example, or the superfluous shallowness of tweets, instant comments and fragmentary programming....
There's still much good musical programming available from afternoon and evening concerts (and accessible more or less anytime you want); but the competition of such from elsewhere has put a potentially high-quality public service under lot of pressure...
Whoa! Gotta rescue the Guardian and the Gramophone from the thunder quick....
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