I think many of us have the same feeling when a CE is pre-recorded. Nowt like a live broadcast. It's difficult to explain why.
A Service for Advent with Carols / Chapel of St John’s College, Cambridge / 28.xi.21
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Originally posted by ardcarp View PostI think many of us have the same feeling when a CE is pre-recorded. Nowt like a live broadcast. It's difficult to explain why.
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Originally posted by oddoneout View PostI think there are two, interlinked, elements to a live relay. Whatever atmosphere exists and is transmitted(and it does, sometimes powerfully so, despite physics etc saying it isn't possible) is happening there and then. Part of that atmosphere is the awareness that things don't always go as intended, that there may be tricky bits in that days music choices, which adds a certain edge. The recording will contain those elements factually but lack the immediacy which pulls you into a live relay.
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Originally posted by oddoneout View PostI think there are two, interlinked, elements to a live relay. Whatever atmosphere exists and is transmitted(and it does, sometimes powerfully so, despite physics etc saying it isn't possible) is happening there and then. Part of that atmosphere is the awareness that things don't always go as intended, that there may be tricky bits in that days music choices, which adds a certain edge. The recording will contain those elements factually but lack the immediacy which pulls you into a live relay.
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Originally posted by Keraulophone View PostBe that as it may, ignoring completely the opportunity to listen to a recording of an excellent service or concert because it isn’t live would appear to be somewhat limiting. What percentage of R3 output is actually live? One might also say that listening to a live broadcast on R3 provides only a fraction of the experience of actually being in situ. Some recordings, such as many of Toscanini’s or the Brahms 1 CSO/Levine done in one take in a spare session, have more than a fair dose of ‘liveness’ - you don’t have to have been in the studio at the time to recognise this, though of course it will sound the same the second time you hear it, so you’d know what was coming.
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Originally posted by Keraulophone View PostBe that as it may, ignoring completely the opportunity to listen to a recording of an excellent service or concert because it isn’t live would appear to be somewhat limiting. What percentage of R3 output is actually live? One might also say that listening to a live broadcast on R3 provides only a fraction of the experience of actually being in situ. Some recordings, such as many of Toscanini’s or the Brahms 1 CSO/Levine done in one take in a spare session, have more than a fair dose of ‘liveness’ - you don’t have to have been in the studio at the time to recognise this, though of course it will sound the same the second time you hear it, so you’d know what was coming.
The religious aspects aren't that important to me but there are occasions when listening live taps into a level beyond just a response to the music - the spiritual side that comes from the underlying purpose I suppose - and is all the more satisfying as a result. The repeat may well be enjoyed, but not in quite the same way.
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There is always the middle way of not being aware whether something is live or not. Achievable deliberately perhaps if you keep yourself unaware of the schedules and get another person to tune in or open BBC Sounds for you.
There are plenty of people out there who think Carols From King’s on the telly is live, and experience and appreciate it as such, despite it being physically impossible due to the camera angles involved.
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Originally posted by cat View PostThere are plenty of people out there who think Carols From King’s on the telly is live, and experience and appreciate it as such, despite it being physically impossible due to the camera angles involved.
A fortiori, the Easter BBC2 broadcast, recorded mid-Advent!
"...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
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Originally posted by jonfan View PostInteresting discussion; anything on the radio [wireless] isn't live for the individual as we're not physically THERE. But my goodness for me these online Advent services are very much not second best in that regard.
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Originally posted by ardcarp View PostHe's not ditching the choir. I'll bet it will sound just as superb under its new arrangements!
He's all over the place considering his original statements on the College site where he says he's always wanted to have a mixed sex choir.
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