Originally posted by oddoneout
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Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View PostThis doesn’t tally with with my experience of AC and I listen most days .Not only was the Saint-Seans complete it was also a superb performance by Juan de la Rubia, organ with RTVE Symphony Orchestra and Pablo Gonzalez, conductor . There was also a complete Haydn Bear symphony. Most Afternoon concerts seem to feature three substantial complete works - typically a concerto and two symphonies .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 PostClearly, I picked on the wrong day.
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This is the earliest Afternoon Concert I could find on BBC Genome - probably broadcast in Northern Regions only. It is pretty much a pot-pourri. 2LS is the old Leeds based Radio service - I suspect the concert would have come from Manchester.
16:10
An Afternoon Concert
2LS Leeds logo
2LS Leeds
Sat 3rd Jan 1931, 16:10 on 2LS Leeds
View in Radio Times
The Northern Wireless Orchestra: Selection. Tosca (Puccini). Zelda Bock (Pianoforte): Berceuse, Op. 57 (Chopin): Concert Study in D Flat(Liszt). Orchestra: Three Eastern Sketches (Howgill); Morning; Afternoon; Evening. Zelda Bock : Ni
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Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View PostI’ve just looked through the last week and every episode contains at least three complete works e.g, symphony , concerto , Debussy La Mer. If that isn’t a concert what is? The fact that shorter works are interspersed is pretty much in line with early 20th century and nineteenth century concert practice. Afternoon Concert is not a good example of so- called “dumbing down” . There are other parts of the Radio 3 schedule which fit that bill much better .
I don't agree with the implication behind, "If that isn’t a concert what is?" It's precisely the additions to the symphony, concerto, overture/tone poem type format which makes the programme resemble the playlist programmes Breakfast or Essential Classics.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 PostIf 1.7m people are still listening to Radio 3, clearly they're not entirely displeased with everything (in fact they may be pleased with everything). I'm not personally convinced that 19th and early 20th c. practice should be the yardstick for an orchestral concert today, and the litter of different genres spread out between up to a dozen pieces would not be for me. There were even complaints a few years back about the evening concert interval being musical, especially if in a different genre. But I suppose one gets used to anything if one chooses to persist.
I don't agree with the implication behind, "If that isn’t a concert what is?" It's precisely the additions to the symphony, concerto, overture/tone poem type format which makes the programme resemble the playlist programmes Breakfast or Essential Classics.
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Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View PostI think you’re maybe stuck in the mindset that a concert has to be three substantial works. That format - typically overture , concerto , symphony - makes up only a tiny proportion of all the many “concert “ types that have been programmed over the centuries . It’s as much the product of marketing as of any artistic impulse . Afternoon Concert is far removed from Essential Classics because it largely consists of complete works. Very often when extracts are played they are directly related to the main works.
But, really, I'm happy to accept this is just a difference of taste. It's just that so much of R3 has gone down a similar path that I am no longer one of the 1.7m listening.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 Ein Heldenleben View PostI’ve just looked through the last week and every episode contains at least three complete works e.g, symphony , concerto , Debussy La Mer. If that isn’t a concert what is? The fact that shorter works are interspersed is pretty much in line with early 20th century and nineteenth century concert practice. Afternoon Concert is not a good example of so- called “dumbing down” . There are other parts of the Radio 3 schedule which fit that bill much better .
PS the oft-trotted-out term "dumbing-down" does not appeal to me either in this context - or indeed generally:
a) American usage of "dumb", which usually means "silent" or "not able to speak" in Britain.
b) now a cliché for condemning any attempt to broaden the appeal of classical music. Clearly, not all such attempts will work for everybody, me included, but I don't have to listen and can see that they need to try something different.
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Originally posted by gurnemanz View PostAgreed. If Afternoon Concert were similar to Essential Classics, as suggested above, I would not be listening.
Originally posted by gurnemanz View PostPS the oft-trotted-out term "dumbing-down" does not appeal to me either in this context - or indeed generally:
But as I say, it really does only depend on what the individual likes.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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Looks to be all complete pieces this pm and fairly outré fare. One might almost say public service broadcasting at its best - almost as if they've been listening to comments . I agree re “dumbing down” which is why I put it in quotation marks. The use of the phrase is in itself evidence of cultural decline but it’s a lost battle.
Today’s programme
Franck
Les eolides
BBC Philharmonic
Yan Pascal Tortelier, conductor
Debussy
Syrinx
Anne Danican Philidor
Sonata in D
Lucie Horsch, recorder
Thomas Dunford, lute
Schubert
Four Polonaises, D.599
Lucas & Arthur Jussen, piano
3.00
Franck
Symphony in D minor, Op.48
RTVE Symphony Orchestra
Chloe van Soeterstede, conductor
Francis Grier
Missa Aedis Christi
BBC Singers
James Sherlock, conductor
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Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View PostLooks to be all complete pieces this pm and fairly outré fare. One might almost say public service broadcasting at its best - almost as if they've been listening to comments . I agree re “dumbing down” which is why I put it in quotation marks. The use of the phrase is in itself evidence of cultural decline but it’s a lost battle.
Today’s programme
Franck
Les eolides
BBC Philharmonic
Yan Pascal Tortelier, conductor
Debussy
Syrinx
Anne Danican Philidor
Sonata in D
Lucie Horsch, recorder
Thomas Dunford, lute
Schubert
Four Polonaises, D.599
Lucas & Arthur Jussen, piano
3.00
Franck
Symphony in D minor, Op.48
RTVE Symphony Orchestra
Chloe van Soeterstede, conductor
Francis Grier
Missa Aedis Christi
BBC Singers
James Sherlock, conductor
Why the one movement of the Franck which is the 3-00pm feature, as has been done with all the other 3-00pm big pieces this week - are we supposed to compare and contrast, as they are different performers?
I just find the current version not as much to my taste as used to be the case. I don't like having recitals chopped up and put between other items that I can't see the connection with (as with Lucie Horsch this week), the published schedule is not the full schedule, sometimes by several pieces, which I find confusing on occasion if I come in part way through expecting one thing and getting something else, I don't like the inclusion of the adverts - with the number of short pieces it's sometimes difficult to know what's trail and what's AC unless it's one I've heard umpteen times before, and there's a lot more presenter chat than there used to be.
I'm not wedded to the traditional concert format, so that's not the issue. I also rather like having unusual pairings or connections but I don't feel that is what is being done now, it just seems to be fairly random juxtapositions. It used to be the case that AC was something I was happy to listen to all through unless the big work was something I really didn't like, and in fact was often preferred to the evening concert offering, not least because there seemed to be a greater chance of hearing something different from the normal repertoire.
However I accept this is all perceptions and subjective reactions, and possibly elements of faulty memory, but whatever the cause I don't listen nearly as much.
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Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View PostI though Syrinx on the recorder was seriously weird.
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Originally posted by oddoneout View PostI'm not wedded to the traditional concert format ...
As far as the quarterly figures are concerned I suspect we haven't really returned to 'business as usual' and perhaps never will do, as things move on and listening habits change. Comparisons are not so much odious as gruesome, but there are quarter on quarter figures - June 2022/September 2022; and year on year September 2021/September 2022. For what they're worth.
So June 2022, reach 2.022m, share 1.5% (highish), compared with September 2022, reach 1.708m (terrible), share 1.3% (normal)
September 2021, reach 2.165m, share 1.6% (high).
Breakfast:
Sept 2021 708k; June 2022 699k; Sept 2022 595k.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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