Originally posted by french frank
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But none of the narrowing and focus on only select popular 'brands' is limited to this music. Wherever you look it seems to be a much less diverse mainstream musical landscape. The singles charts are pretty much down to one style of pop music, the albums charts dominated it seems by brand artists who have a decade or more of producing very similar material and most other forms of music relegated to the margins identified only by one or two names.
The same is probably true - at least in terms of income - for most of the arts now.
But I am hopeful. I am hopeful simply because there is so much quality and diversity out there away from the mainstream. I am hopeful because despite the PR drives the sales of the forced mainstream are falling and so are audiences and viewing figures. Look at the bookshelves at what is selling there: people are, remarkably, seeking out information and knowledge. They may not be outselling J K Rowling (good storyteller, not good writer) but they are selling at levels that would have been unthinkable when the only 'smart' book people bought was a Brief History of Time.
Finally, I do think the BBC gets a remarkably hard time. Perhaps I don't remember when Radio 3 was only a 'classical' music station. When I grew up it hosted Test Match Special for most of the summer, had a significant amount of jazz, world music and plenty of diversions into conversation. For all its faults, there is still no other station like it on the dial. The mornings may sound a bit Classic FM (but then, bizarrely, listening to Classic FM does not ever sound a bit like listening to Radio 3) but then it wouldn't be serving its entire audience if every programme was a solemn introduction to a complete piece.
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