Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie
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Categorisation of Music
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostThat would be Talking About Music.
But the topic itself could be Categorisation of Music. What do you think?
I think Saturdays on Radio 3 is a problem . Several magazine programmes followed by screen music, world music , jazz , then opera . It has a bit of a “where do we shove this ?” feel to it …
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Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View PostCategorisation of music : A necessary Evil ?
I think Saturdays on Radio 3 is a problem . Several magazine programmes followed by screen music, world music , jazz , then opera . It has a bit of a “where do we shove this ?” feel to it …
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostWell - I've done it now. Rather a bodged job, I'm afraid, with some posts directly relevant to Breakfast being cast one way or the other.
But I ask that people keep to the label on the tin, by staying on topic.
I wasn't going to reenter the lists on this, but one thought did occur. When one talks of 'genres' what exactly (or even generally) does one mean? My Mozart records are shelved in 'genres' in that the symphonies come first, then the concertos (piano, then horn &c), sonatas (piano, then violin), chamber ensembles, operas). But since all my discs are 'classical', the question of jazz, popular, folk doesn't arise. I see I have a smuggled recording of Tibetan nuns singing in a Chinese prison, a CD of Thai folk music and one of Chinese 'classical folk music' by Pan Jing and Ensemble, they just have a separate little compartment in the cabinet (Pan Jing could go after Pachelbel, I suppose, though I can't see what would be gained). I did have teenage pop records but got rid of them all.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 PostBlimey - that gave me a shock! I was trying to remember when I'd started a thread on the subject.
I wasn't going to reenter the lists on this, but one thought did occur. When one talks of 'genres' what exactly (or even generally) does one mean? My Mozart records are shelved in 'genres' in that the symphonies come first, then the concertos (piano, then horn &c), sonatas (piano, then violin), chamber ensembles, operas). But since all my discs are 'classical', the question of jazz, popular, folk doesn't arise. I see I have a smuggled recording of Tibetan nuns singing in a Chinese prison, a CD of Thai folk music and one of Chinese 'classical folk music' by Pan Jing and Ensemble, they just have a separate little compartment in the cabinet (Pan Jing could go after Pachelbel, I suppose, though I can't see what would be gained). I did have teenage pop records but got rid of them all.
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Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View PostI have orchestral - vaguely alphabetically , then Piano (solo and concerti) , English music (except Elgar and Britten ) , jazz , rock , and opera as separate categories (apart from jumbo box sets) , oh yes and then a pile of BBC MUsic mag CDs and a stack of CDs on the player and a whole rack of hors de categorie that I can’t be bothered to file.
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostThat's because Radio 3 has becoming the general dumping ground for the music no-one else wants.
I was reminded of this creeping space reduction on a couple of occasions in recent days. One was being caught out by the imposition of dumbtime; I thought I had missed its intrusion when sleepless in the wee small hours but found it was the 1am to 3am version. The other occasion was Tuesday night when the radio happened to be on later than usual (following the Proms repeat) and something called Laura Mvula's Music Room came on, which appeared to be yet another tracks wot I like session. I didn't dislike it as such, and don't like musical apartheid, but just couldn't see what the hell it was doing on R3.
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Originally posted by RichardB View PostBut seriously... part of the beauty of having recorded music backed up in digital files rather than on physical CDs is that it no longer matters what order it's in! If you want to find something you just type it into a search box.
You can programme CDs as well, but not to the extent you can have Popeye in the middle of Der Rosenkavelier.
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