Originally posted by Roger Webb
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Proms 2024
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Originally posted by pastoralguy View Post
I didn’t hear the Radio4 interview but it was reported on the Radio3 8 O’clock news. Apparently, the CBSO have no intention of changing this ‘policy!’ Apart from the obvious distractions I wonder about infringing copyright on music that is still covered. For instance, if the CBSO played music by John Williams then recording it on a mobile‘phone would surely be an infringement of copyright?
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Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View Post
He was singing Les Iluminations by Britten also in copyright as his performance and that of the orchestra.
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Originally posted by Roger Webb View Post
Well the practice is rife in the pop world, and I can't remember a case being brought in that most litigious area of the music business.
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Originally posted by pastoralguy View PostI’ve always thought that the main reason classical musicians don’t want to be recorded is that it usually sounds dreadful on a mobile ‘phone anyway. I did it once at a rehearsal and the results were very amateur.
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Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View Post
That’s not strictly true. Broadcasters and publishers spend a lot of time getting copyright material taken down from social media. They don’t go after individuals as it’s too time consuming . Many pop musicians confiscate mobile phones pre -performance mainly because they don’t like looking at a sea of phones.
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Originally posted by Roger Webb View Post
Yes, I think it's too difficult to squeeze the genie back into the bottle, vis-a-vis individual phone users...and it's true YouTube spends a lot of time taking down unauthorised stuff. Robert Fripp is in the vanguard of artists against phone-filming at live events, and will stop the concert if it gets out of hand.....usually he docks an encore - in extreme cases he doesn't play 21st Century Schizoid Man.......now that would really hammer home the message!
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Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View Post
Kate Bush banned them completely at her comeback gig. Pastoral Guy is right - they are not much cop in terms of getting decent sound - and the pictures are even worse - so I always wonder why people bother.
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Originally posted by Roger Webb View Post
Although every concert on the last (is it really the last?!) Genesis tour was posted on YouTube immediately after the concert finished and I think they're still there.....and in startlingly good picture quality (not for a pro like you perhaps!), sound not so - depends where the phone operator was, and whether he was chatting to his neighbour ! I don't think Genesis mind, although YouTube postings of their official recordings are taken down, but this may be a record company policy.
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Originally posted by Roger Webb View PostYes, I think it's too difficult to squeeze the genie back into the bottle, vis-a-vis individual phone users.
[My award for the two worst inventions of modern times: social media and mobile phones because they alter behaviour between human beings for the worse. Actually, the original cell-phones which were just about mobile were ok. Big as the old bus conductors ticket machine.]
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 Ein Heldenleben View Post
Yes some of the newer mobile phones are technically almost indistinguishable from broadcast cameras. There’s a BBC series almost entirely shot on an iPhone ..
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Originally posted by french frank View Post
[My award for the two worst inventions of modern times: social media and mobile phones because they alter behaviour between human beings for the worse..]
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Originally posted by Roger Webb View Post
I remember a TV programme featuring David Bailey who declared 'posh' cameras, Nikon's, Hasselblads, etc to be 'male jewelry ' and said great photographers of the past had used quite rudimentary equipment eg Cartier- Bresson used a little viewfinder camera. To prove the point he took a model to a photo booth, and after explaining the limitations of the camera, set about modifying it - masking some of the 'flat' lighting, etc. produced an amazing portrait with almost Caravaggio chiaroscuro!
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