Originally posted by oddoneout
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Arts in the UK post-Brexit
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Originally posted by Lat-Literal View PostArts in the UK post-Brexit
Has anyone any answers yet to:
(a) how many significant people involved in orchestras etc in the UK would be impacted by Brexit
(b) the nature/range of "non-commercial" music that would be affected and the numbers involved?
(Post 196)
I'm still waiting to know
how many people involved in orchestras etc in the UK think that Brexit is a great idea and has opportunities for the cultural life of the UK ?
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostBritain is culturally part of Europe in very many ways and always has been, as well of course as being geographically part of it.
What I see from my perspective is that funding for the kind of musical projects I'm involved in is being reduced almost everywhere (except for example in the USA where it was never there in the first place) and one way of working with this problem is to pool resources across countries. If the UK were to be excluded from such networks and retain as much activity in this kind of area as is going on now, there would have to be a fairly considerable increase in institutional support for it, and I don't see that being part of the Tory post-Brexit economic plan.
It's hard to be "proactive" when you don't get paid for what you do.
The UK is by "choice" excluding itself from many networks, no amount of people with no knowledge banging on about how it could be different will change that.
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Originally posted by MrGongGong View Post"significant people" ?
I'm still waiting to know
how many people involved in orchestras etc in the UK think that Brexit is a great idea and has opportunities for the cultural life of the UK ?
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Originally posted by Lat-Literal View PostI am beginning to think I was misinterpreting "non-commercial music" by thinking it meant "not for profit". Perhaps what is being discussed here is specialist music but I'm guessing in the absence of anything else.
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostIt means the vast majority of the music that gets discussed on this forum. The kind(s) of music broadcast by Radio 3. That should surely be obvious.
I thought you were meaning originally music that is not commercially sold.
That category might conceivably have included funding to students and others who were involved in musical development and experimentation without a profit aim.
But I guess almost everyone - apart from me - is in the game of making money now.Last edited by Lat-Literal; 15-10-18, 20:08.
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Originally posted by Lat-Literal View PostIt wasn't to me initially, hence my comments on busking pan pipe groups.
I thought you were meaning originally music that is not commercially sold.
That category might conceivably have included funding to students and others who were involved in musical development and experimentation without a profit aim.
But I guess almost everyone - apart from me - is in the game of making money now.
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Originally posted by Stanfordian View PostPost Brexit, with all the aftermath the party in power will be far less bothered about the Arts than they are now. Art education should start in State schools.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 Stanfordian View PostPost Brexit, with all the aftermath the party in power will be far less bothered about the Arts than they are now. Art education should start in State schools.
And I mentioned before about grammar schools (but the post has been deleted) - we shot ourselves in the foot on a number of levels when we decided to get rid of them. My school in north east London produced many excellent musicians including Sir John Pritchard, Johnny Dankworth and Michael Nyman. But it was all part of the grammer school ethos. I don't think we'll ever get that back now. Great levellers though, schools nowadays.
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Originally posted by Beef Oven! View PostAnd I mentioned before about grammar schools (but the post has been deleted) - we shot ourselves in the foot on a number of levels when we decided to get rid of them. My school in north east London produced many excellent musicians including Sir John Pritchard, Johnny Dankworth and Michael Nyman. But it was all part of the grammer school ethos. I don't think we'll ever get that back now. Great levellers though, schools nowadays.
I know you don't really do "evidence" but you are simply WRONG about Grammar/Grammer/Grammuur schools
Shoe box
M62
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Originally posted by Beef Oven! View PostAnd I mentioned before about grammar schools (but the post has been deleted) - we shot ourselves in the foot on a number of levels when we decided to get rid of them......
But the state school system overall would not be producing adults who had experienced the music we talk about and some of them in some way supporting it in their later life - listening to Radio 3 or Classic FM, going to concerts, supporting their child, such as when learning an instrument etc etc. Or even being involved in music making.
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Originally posted by Cockney Sparrow View PostSo, it seems that after music and performing arts are all but eliminated from state schools by other pressures music will be "for the few not the many". But if only we still had Grammar Schools - where it would be "for the not-quite-so-few but still not the many" because that produced eminent musicians.
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostIn fact of course schools don't "produce" eminent musicians, they create the conditions where students can develop their interests and abilities. And there's no law of nature that says this requires a tiered school system. It does however require this function of schools to be seriously supported, which relates right down to what the functions of schools are perceived to be - to facilitate imagination and independent thinking, or to encourage the development of conformity, of citizens who will consume and behave as desired by the system. Under a framework featuring grammar schools (not to mention public schools) the former is conveniently restricted to the few, as you say. The factor of location is also important here: affluent London as opposed to the provinces. (I speak as a "product" of a provincial comprehensive school.)
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