Originally posted by ahinton
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Confession time....
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Northender
Originally posted by french frank View PostIf you listen to Today, then Essential Classics is tailored specially for you (and the Breakfast audience).
The programme's commissioning brief stated:
"This is a significant part of Radio 3’s weekday daytime schedule and should aim to hold on to as much of the breakfast audience as possible whilst drawing in new listeners from the post-Today Radio 4 switch over ... Presentation should be light and brief, without in-depth musicological or complicated biographical detail."
I have recently started listening to the Early Music Show, which seems to be aimed at a very different audience...
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostBut would you prefer not to reveal it or are you in the process of working on it?...
In the context of the commissioning brief for Essential Classics (which was where the quote about 'complicated biography' came from), I was thinking in terms of the music played on Essential Classics ('mainstream classics' says the brief; and 'The focus will be on essential classics.').
The references to 'in depth musicological details' and 'complicated biography', rightly or wrongly, made me think of classical music's 'essential composers'. Once my mind had locked on to that concept, all thought of their husbands - or even toy boys - was involuntarily blanked out.
Northender
Well - to quote a recent Nationwide advert - 'it doesn't work like that'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 you listen to Today, then Essential Classics is tailored specially for you (and the Breakfast audience).
The programme's commissioning brief stated:
"This is a significant part of Radio 3’s weekday daytime schedule and should aim to hold on to as much of the breakfast audience as possible whilst drawing in new listeners from the post-Today Radio 4 switch over ... Presentation should be light and brief, without in-depth musicological or complicated biographical detail."
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostI'm trying, against my better judgement and without any success, to figure out (a) what's so "classically essential" about Sarah Naughtague as a warm-up act for Sarah Walker
'In creating Morning Collection Nicholas Kenyon had a specific mission, to lure “grazing” listeners who stayed to the end of Radio 4’s Today and were looking for other radio pastures. [...] Says Gambaccini: “I had a specific mission to invite Today listeners to stay with the BBC rather than go to Classic FM, and to do it in a way which was consistent with the quality and content of Radio 3.” '
[THREE CHEERS? Why Paul Gambaccini’s ‘Morning Collection’ may yet prove the critics wrong
Radio Times 3-9 February 1996 pp 6-7]
My bold. I rest ma valise.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 PostWell, when Paul Gambaccini was drafted in to present the 9am Morning Collection on Radio 3 in 1995, he defended himself against the critics in an article in Radio Times:
'In creating Morning Collection Nicholas Kenyon had a specific mission, to lure “grazing” listeners who stayed to the end of Radio 4’s Today and were looking for other radio pastures. [...] Says Gambaccini: “I had a specific mission to invite Today listeners to stay with the BBC rather than go to Classic FM, and to do it in a way which was consistent with the quality and content of Radio 3.” '
[THREE CHEERS? Why Paul Gambaccini’s ‘Morning Collection’ may yet prove the critics wrong
Radio Times 3-9 February 1996 pp 6-7]
My bold. I rest ma valise.
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Northender
Originally posted by french frank View PostI just wondered whether you would be so eager to know that you would want to pursue the matter. As you have:
In the context of the commissioning brief for Essential Classics (which was where the quote about 'complicated biography' came from), I was thinking in terms of the music played on Essential Classics ('mainstream classics' says the brief; and 'The focus will be on essential classics.').
The references to 'in depth musicological details' and 'complicated biography', rightly or wrongly, made me think of classical music's 'essential composers'. Once my mind had locked on to that concept, all thought of their husbands - or even toy boys - was involuntarily blanked out.
Northender
You are shaking the very foundations of the BBC's Marketing, Communications and Audiences department, of which the current head of radio, Mr Davie, was previously the Director.
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