When it comes to dumbing down on Radio 4, I think of several programmes broadcast at 9am. They are not the only culprits but are among the worst of the output. Today's "Saturday Live" really scraped the bottom of the barrel. Fiona Shaw was asked to pick two inheritance tracks. This is the feature in which someone describes a piece of music they would like to be left to them on someone's death and another that they would leave to someone else. The second of this morning's choices by the actress was the last chorus of Poulenc's "Dialogues of the Carmelites", a serious piece of music about which she made several serious points.
Wikipedia describes the chorus as follows: The nuns are all arrested and condemned to death, but Mother Marie is away (with Blanche, presumably) at the time. The chaplain tells Mother Marie that since God has chosen to spare her, she cannot now voluntarily become a martyr by joining the others in prison. The nuns (one by one) slowly mount the scaffold, singing the Veni Creator Spiritus, the hymn traditionally used when offering one's life to God. At the last minute, Blanche appears, to Constance's joy, and joins the condemned community. Having seen all the other nuns executed as she mounts the scaffold, Blanche concludes their hymn with its final verse, Deo Patri sit gloria... ("Glory to God the Father").
As soon as the item finished, there was no presentation. Instead, the listeners were greeted to several seconds of disrespectful giggly laughter by the two presenters who were for some reason amused about the sombre nature of the piece. "Stop it Richard", the Radio 2 presenter said, while the Reverend was so overtaken by chortling that he offered nothing at all. "Chirpy Chirpy Cheep Cheep" the first continued. No - but the programme was precisely that, chaotic, crass, in very bad taste, and it was a comedian who had to bring them to their senses. "It is becoming like The One Show" he said or words to that effect. Sickening all round.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode...ve_15_12_2012/ (1.02 onwards)
Wikipedia describes the chorus as follows: The nuns are all arrested and condemned to death, but Mother Marie is away (with Blanche, presumably) at the time. The chaplain tells Mother Marie that since God has chosen to spare her, she cannot now voluntarily become a martyr by joining the others in prison. The nuns (one by one) slowly mount the scaffold, singing the Veni Creator Spiritus, the hymn traditionally used when offering one's life to God. At the last minute, Blanche appears, to Constance's joy, and joins the condemned community. Having seen all the other nuns executed as she mounts the scaffold, Blanche concludes their hymn with its final verse, Deo Patri sit gloria... ("Glory to God the Father").
As soon as the item finished, there was no presentation. Instead, the listeners were greeted to several seconds of disrespectful giggly laughter by the two presenters who were for some reason amused about the sombre nature of the piece. "Stop it Richard", the Radio 2 presenter said, while the Reverend was so overtaken by chortling that he offered nothing at all. "Chirpy Chirpy Cheep Cheep" the first continued. No - but the programme was precisely that, chaotic, crass, in very bad taste, and it was a comedian who had to bring them to their senses. "It is becoming like The One Show" he said or words to that effect. Sickening all round.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode...ve_15_12_2012/ (1.02 onwards)
Comment