Originally posted by kernelbogey
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The Spectator's view of R3
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John Skelton
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Originally posted by kernelbogey View PostFaure - sorry can't put the acute on the e - consistently pronounced like foray by even the most careful presenters.
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Don Petter
Originally posted by mangerton View Post
Run charmap.exe, found in your System32 folder. I have a short cut to it on my desktop so it is always easily available.
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VodkaDilc
Updates to The Spectator's R3 crusade:
Last week:
My thanks to readers who are sending examples of Radio 3 vacuity. The email is letters@spectator.co.uk. The address is ‘Radio Twee’, The Spectator, 22 Old Queen Street, London SW1H 9HP. The winner gets a DVD of Handel’s Serse. When I switched on last, I heard a listener explaining at some length how she had been converted to opera by listening to Madam Butterfly nine years ago. That was the sum of the musical information conveyed. She did not remember who had sung the role.
And this week:
Thank you, readers, for your reports on ‘Radio Twee’. Here is Sarah Mohr-Pietsch: ‘Of course Bach didn’t mind about dying, because in those days people believed in Heaven and thought they were going there.’ More, more.
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Simon
Originally posted by Panjandrum View PostTell me. I haven't the time or inclination to waste any more time on this.
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Originally posted by Simon View PostThe dirham is the currency of the UAE. It was Alistair's little pun on Katie's surname, substituting it for a brass farthing. Unless there was something else that I missed, too. :)
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Originally posted by VodkaDilc View PostThe winner gets a DVD of Handel’s Serse.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 John Skelton View PostI bet there isn't another (?) European country where anyone gets this exercised by improper pronunciation of proper nouns in other peoples' languages.
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Simon
Originally posted by Vile Consort View PostIf it is true that other countries don't get exercised about this issue, it's because their announcers don't make a complete hash of it in the first place so there is nothing to become exercised about.
I expect RAI etc. would manage Britten and Elgar, but I'd like to hear their attempts at Ralph Vaughan-Williams.
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Originally posted by Simon View PostI don't generally listen to classical music stations when abroad, but foreign broadcast media staff - especially TV - can certainly mangle English!
I expect RAI etc. would manage Britten and Elgar, but I'd like to hear their attempts at Ralph Vaughan-Williams.
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Panjandrum
Originally posted by VodkaDilc View PostUpdates to The Spectator's R3 crusade:
Here is Sarah Mohr-Pietsch: ‘Of course Bach didn’t mind about dying, because in those days people believed in Heaven and thought they were going there.’ More, more.
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hackneyvi
Originally posted by VodkaDilc View PostFrom this week's Spectator: Charles Moore's view of R3:
To me, a musical ignoramus, the pleasure of listening to Radio 3 is related to the idea that you (meaning, himself [meaning, "I" {meaning, Moore}]) might learn something.
To me, the pleasure of listening to Radio 3 is hearing live and modern/contemporary music (or, some of it). Sometimes the talks, like the one of last week on Brahms' German Mass.
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