ff, I agree with you about the decline in quality on R3, but I wonder about how significant it is, I mean how important R3 is both to this generation and to new generations who may be interested in classical music. Isn't there a fundamental shift in the way that people get to know about different music, new interpretations from the way in which our generation, typically growing up in the 50s and 60s, did? The post-war idea was to have culture on the BBC radiating out to the country primarily from the centre (though also with regional orchestras). The main information about new music, new recordings, new interpretations, would come from there. Undoubtedly this was very successful for several decades with the Third and its successor R3 as new music, great performances in live concerts, new plays and great productions of classic plays were provided. But the classical music repertoire (I mean of what is available on disc or other media) has grown enormously compared with what it was say in the 1960s or 1970s. You have only to look at Suffolkcoastal's mammoth symphonic odyssey - 90% of which I would estimate has never or rarely been broadcast on R3 - to see that what R3 now covers is really the tip of a huge iceberg. And then there is contemporary music, including electronic music, which is hardly given any coverage on R3. Not to mention new writing from all parts of the globe.
More to the point, is linear, centralised broadcasting the way in which people will now expect to find out about music or art of the spoken word in which they are interested? Or is it more via virtual communities like this one, or the increasing number of ways in which live and recorded music can be obtained elsewhere, not least directly from the arts organisations themselves (NT Live, the Berlin Philharmonic digital concert hall, etc)? Is it perhaps too much to ask the BBC to try to fulfil a role which is now not nearly as relevant - at least in terms of arts provision - as it was. Of course there are still good concerts on R3, coverage of the Proms and other festivals, but in some respects the range of competing demands now from an audience interested in more varied music than simply the familiar classics is too great to be satisfied by any one linear broadcaster.
More to the point, is linear, centralised broadcasting the way in which people will now expect to find out about music or art of the spoken word in which they are interested? Or is it more via virtual communities like this one, or the increasing number of ways in which live and recorded music can be obtained elsewhere, not least directly from the arts organisations themselves (NT Live, the Berlin Philharmonic digital concert hall, etc)? Is it perhaps too much to ask the BBC to try to fulfil a role which is now not nearly as relevant - at least in terms of arts provision - as it was. Of course there are still good concerts on R3, coverage of the Proms and other festivals, but in some respects the range of competing demands now from an audience interested in more varied music than simply the familiar classics is too great to be satisfied by any one linear broadcaster.
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