Originally posted by Jane Sullivan
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Trashing Sublimity- The Heptonstall-Derham problem
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amateur51
Originally posted by cavatina View PostWhen I worked in the music business (and more generally, the nonprofit sector), time and again I saw organizations flounder and fail because they refused to take an accurate assessment of the current state of affairs and change their fundamental strategy to match the times. Eventually, I was hired by a major US think tank as an assistant research analyst to do analytic research support for a study on this very issue. Here's an excerpt:
THE PERFORMING ARTS IN A NEW ERA
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Originally posted by amateur51 View PostWhich bit were you responsible for, cavatina?
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Anna
Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostI was wondering that, after trawling all the way through, AM51. I'm surmising: either cav was reproducing it as an example of the sort of research she was involved in at that institution, or maybe contributing under a pseudonym?
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Originally posted by Anna View PostWell I'm blowed if I'm going to plough through 166 pages of something emanating from the US which is entirely irrelevant to the discussion here. Can someone remind me what the subject was? Oh yes, I remember it now, Radio 3 presentation wasn't it?
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VodkaDilc
Originally posted by french frank View Post"To some extent, the performance of Radio 3 amongst different demographic groups reflects a difference in taste. For instance, younger audiences and those from less well-off households are more likely to be interested in other types of music." BBC Trust review.
(And looking at the next point, about R3 being a little inaccessible and daunting at times, it was the same then. Isn't this all part of stretching the audience's horizons?)
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What's more, the generation growing up now is supposedly much more widely educated than the one in the 60s and 70s - university education having expanded by three or four times from what it was then. And listening to music - any music - is not greatly intellectually challenging in the way that, say, studying string theory might be. I think the BBC persistently underestimates the intelligence of its potential audience and underestimates the demand for quality broadcasting. One has only to look at the success of opera transmissions live to cinema, as described in this article, to see that there is a real audience that the BBC is neglecting (and not only in opera, but also in classic drama, as the NT live-to-cinema project is demonstrating).Last edited by aeolium; 25-08-11, 19:53.
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Originally posted by VodkaDilc View PostLike Eine Alpensinfonie I am appalled by this. As a younger person, certainly from a less well-off home, in the 1960s and 70s, I went to more concerts, listened to more music, played more music and read more about music than I have at any other time in my life.(And I mean music which might be described as 'classical'.) R3 (or a previous version of it) was a major influence in generating the excitement which exploring music brought to me. I did not consider myself unusual; neither did my many contemporaries who felt the same way. Why does the BBC persist with this nonsense?
(And looking at the next point, about R3 being a little inaccessible and daunting at times, it was the same then. Isn't this all part of stretching the audience's horizons?)
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Lateralthinking1
Yes and let's be a little blunt about this, shall we? Say things that the management assume will never be said because they probably perceive the audience as being, principally, diplomatically inclined and intellectual.
The programmes that they gear towards notions of ethnicity, gender, sexuality, religion and disability are frequently trumpeted as being important areas of public service which will not be compromised by being made to appeal more broadly. In many respects, I would see this as a good thing.
BUT when it comes to demographics that might show a tendency to appeal to a specific class, the reasoning they apply is precisely the opposite. The fact that this class is then seen as a financially privileged minority is considered utterly diabolical. And that without question reveals nothing more or less than inverted snobbery.
I am neither rich nor posh. Far less so than the decision makers. I can see it as clearly as daylight. And I don't think that cultural manipulation should be used to address overly-approximated distinctions. If people don't like that kind of inequality, tax at source!
I have long held the belief that discrimination in many never disappears. When laws are introduced to protect those most likely to be on the end of discrimination, the less clever and prejudiced ignore them. But the more clever and prejudiced simply shift their discrimination onto other targets. And that is a real problem among the powerful and the influential.Last edited by Guest; 25-08-11, 20:43.
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostWhen I was at school, I was considered a bit strange because I liked classical music. Nowadays I'd be off the map completely.
Hmm. I'm thinking of the immensely complex thoughts that lie behind those four horribly generalised sentences and wish I had the time to articulate them more clearly and fully.Last edited by Roslynmuse; 25-08-11, 20:39. Reason: emoticon added after reflecting upon this post's lack of substance
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Originally posted by aeolium View PostI think the BBC persistently underestimates the intelligence of its potential audience and underestimates the demand for quality broadcasting. One has only to look at the success of opera transmissions live to cinema, as described in this article, to see that there is a real audience that the BBC is neglecting (and not only in opera, but also in classic drama, as the NT live-to-cinema project is demonstrating).
In 1973, Radio 3 had a 'phone-in feature'. Radio 3 people didn't like it, listeners didn't like it and the late, great John Lade said that 'the callers had nothing to say: "I remember that piece so well, it was on our honeymoon and we were walking over the Downs ..." ' And that is exactly the kind of thing Radio 3 is inviting people to talk about. I mean, how many opportunities are there elsewhere on the airwaves for such personal reminiscences?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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