Six pieces in 30 minutes - one and a half written for the organ (the half being a Bach Fugue detached from its Prelude) and four arrangements/transcriptions. What is the point of this programme?
Choir and Organ 3rd December 2017
Collapse
X
-
Originally posted by DracoM View PostKeeping SM-P in a job?[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
Comment
-
-
It is cheap filler material - there is nothing more to say about the program - but as commented it keeps one of the staff busy for the 10mins to select CD and read out the CD cover - surely this must be one of those jobs soon delegated to robot AI assuming R3 makes it beyond the next couple of years.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by subcontrabass View PostSix pieces in 30 minutes - one and a half written for the organ (the half being a Bach Fugue detached from its Prelude) and four arrangements/transcriptions. What is the point of this programme?
Comment
-
-
I gave up on this very quickly, having stumbled across it just before Christmas. If you didn't know what it was about what would expect from a programme called 'Choir and Organ' ? Ah, church music! Hymn settings perhaps. New arrangements. Less well known foreign hymns, maybe by respected foreign choirs. And music from famous or special organs. It's the programme title that's wrong. Could do better.And the tune ends too soon for us all
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Finzi4ever View PostOne month on, and quite possibly a new low 'de profundis inanitatis'. SMP's departing affirmation that we should click & 'follow through' seemed all too appropriate. It would be so easy & still cheap to do this programme well...
Comment
-
-
But this programme NEVER talks about technicals at all. It's just 'tracks' and mumble around a 'theme'. And as SM-P knows nowt about either, all she is required to do is gush and intro 'tracks'.
No discussion on vocal techniques, analysis of different styles in different countries - NOT just playing 'tracks' but actually taking apart- and how choir trainers work, the ageing voices in boys / girls / men / women, the details of organ construction, history of, and playing of.
You get more technical stuff on these Forum threads than on the BBC programme dedicated to it. As usual, the BBC think of the programme as just more wallpaper.
Imagine if GQT just said how pretty flowers were or how succulent veggies were and nothing about advice, recommendations, cultivation, diseases, solutions, AND enshrined differences of opinion too etc?Last edited by DracoM; 08-01-18, 10:48.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by DracoM View PostImagine if GQT just said how pretty flowers were or how succulent veggies were and nothing about advice, recommendations, cultivation, diseases, solutions, AND enshrined differences of opinion too etc?
Comment
-
-
BUT given that of all instruments, the organ is more susceptible to the aural than any other, detailed talk of how, why, if, etc etc would be truly aurally interesting and informative / educative.
I know organists are a fascinating, quiet, often secret society of insiders, but given how many in the nation are weekly even daily exposed to organs / organists in so many different ways, we could cope with being educated by something less miserably superficial than what we get.
Comment
-
-
...but somebody said in another post on another thread, we seem to be in The Post-Fact Era, e.g. the BBC will do a documentary about submarines. You'll see the emotions of the third mate, his mother-in-law's trouble getting the right corn-plasters....but little or nothing about submarines. Too much to hope, therefore, that we'll get much detail about the fascinating 'kist of whistles' that is the organ.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by ardcarp View Post...but somebody said in another post on another thread, we seem to be in The Post-Fact Era, e.g. the BBC will do a documentary about submarines. You'll see the emotions of the third mate, his mother-in-law's trouble getting the right corn-plasters....but little or nothing about submarines. Too much to hope, therefore, that we'll get much detail about the fascinating 'kist of whistles' that is the organ.
The addition of a dash of Post-modernism just exacerbates the problem: when there's your "truth" and there's my "truth" feelings become the nearest thing there is to an objective reality.
Comment
-
Comment