Apologies from a new writer on the Forum if this re-hashes a well-worn topic. The question is: when there is a massive and entirely predictable under-run, would it be possible/desirable to be told in advance (in the published schedule) what music is going to fill the gap?
The present structure of the Radio 3 schedule means that sometimes hefty "fillers" are needed. We have just had a prime example this afternoon: the Pacifica Quartet's Shostakovich concert, allocated two hours in the schedule, ended leaving 45 minutes (!) to fill before the CE repeat. And of course this was already known to the schedulers: it's not as though the concert was live -- it was recorded last month.
I appreciate that the network's schedule online is laid out in a neat grid and no-one would want it to become unnecessarily cluttered. But in circumstances like today's, would it not be a service to the listener (or potential listener) to have some idea of what's to follow? It surely must have been decided well in advance. (For the record, we got three of Shostakovich's Preludes and Fugues, and a complete Mendelssohn string quartet).
With best wishes to all.
The present structure of the Radio 3 schedule means that sometimes hefty "fillers" are needed. We have just had a prime example this afternoon: the Pacifica Quartet's Shostakovich concert, allocated two hours in the schedule, ended leaving 45 minutes (!) to fill before the CE repeat. And of course this was already known to the schedulers: it's not as though the concert was live -- it was recorded last month.
I appreciate that the network's schedule online is laid out in a neat grid and no-one would want it to become unnecessarily cluttered. But in circumstances like today's, would it not be a service to the listener (or potential listener) to have some idea of what's to follow? It surely must have been decided well in advance. (For the record, we got three of Shostakovich's Preludes and Fugues, and a complete Mendelssohn string quartet).
With best wishes to all.
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