Originally posted by Jane Sullivan
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Can you get to the Proms?
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Panjandrum
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David Underdown
While I'd agree that the ideal is to attend in person, and I continued to manage to attend pretty regularly during the 6 seasons when I was living and working in Peterborough - I accept that I was very lucky that personal circumstances allowed me the freedom to do so. However, it does seem to be a false dichotomy to say either try and attend in person or you've no right to complain about the broadcast sound, I don't think it's unreasonable to expect the BBC to provide adequate broadcast sound quality
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I agree with you, David, listeners at home certainly deserve the best quality, which I suspect is not always being provided by the outside contractors who have replaced the experienced BBC staff who used to do the Proms year after year.
I do however detect a slightly dog in the mangerish whiff from a few contributors who seem to delight in knocking the Prommers in the front row. Can I gently point out that there are some season ticket holders who immediately make for the rear of the Arena because they prefer it there, and a large number of us who like to be near what used to be the fountain. We're quite a congenial lot actually, but then you know that. The charity collection organised by front rowers has reached about 60k so far,so the audience good will is still flourishing.
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Al R Gando
Apparently BBC World News no longer have to bother too much about providing decent coverage of international stories. After all, anyone who was seriously interested would just go to the trouble-spots in person to find out for themselves.
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BetweenTheStaves
Just because one hears German spoken among the audience or Swedish or whatever, doesn't necessarily imply that these people have travelled to the UK specifically to come to a Prom. They could just as easily be on long-term attachment or even living here. Even if they were on a visit, just as likely that they are here on business (ie hotel and travel paid for) as on pleasure. So hearing a foreign language is no arbiter. There is no doubt about it, you don't have to live too far outside the central conurbation to find that your last train home leaves just that bit too early. I have been to one Prom this year staying at a friend's house in Newbury. Even then the return journey from Paddington to Newbury was a bit of an epic with bus replacements and we didn't get back until around 2am. £25 return train fare plus my diesel cost to drive from Malvern to Newbury suddenly pushes the price of the whole trip well over £100.
So I rely on a decent quality radio programme.
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David Underdown
That is true. But, I know the people Jane refers to as well, and they really do come specifically for the Proms.
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cavatina
"Poor" is a relative term, and it all depends on your priorities. When I was an impoverished student, so many nights I remember making the choice between buying dinner and getting the $5 student rush ticket at the Philharmonic. I chose music every time, which is how I got in the habit of going to concerts on an empty stomach.
After I graduated I was still fairly broke, so I had a volunteer internship of sorts with an artistic administrator in exchange for all the concert tickets I possibly wanted. I ended up going out most nights of the week-- which, incidentally, is how I developed a preference for the extreme front left long before the Proms, since that's where they always put me. Old habits die hard, I suppose.
There are some who live in or near London who assume that Boristown is the centre of the universe. They are wrong.
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Originally posted by BetweenTheStaves View PostJust because one hears German spoken among the audience or Swedish or whatever, doesn't necessarily imply that these people have travelled to the UK specifically to come to a Prom. They could just as easily be on long-term attachment or even living here.
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Anna
Originally posted by cavatina View Post"Poor" is a relative term, and it all depends on your priorities.Originally posted by cavatina View PostPersonally, I can't imagine living in a fourth-rate city in England any more than I could imagine being stuck in some ghastly hick burg in the middle of nowhere in America. Give me Manhattan or London any day, but to each his own.
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BetweenTheStaves
Originally posted by PhilipT View PostAnd the moon could be made of green cheese and there could be fairies at the bottom of my garden. Talk to the Swede in question and he'll happily tell you, in clear if accented and halting English, that he lives in Gothenburg. But he does also visit Buxton and Glyndebourne on some of his visits here.
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We live in N Wilts (Wootton Bassett - soon to be ennobled to royal status like the Albert Hall) and have no difficulty attending Proms. We have only been once this year so far (Das klagende Lied with Brahms violin) but the opportunity is always there. Although we could go by train from Swindon, it would be more expensive, slower and less convenient than going by car. It is mostly motorway. Google maps says it is 81.9 miles, taking 1.33 hrs and costing £15.72. Getting there takes longer than that due to traffic and you have to build in slack but afterwards the roads are fairly empty and you can easily be back by midnight. It is not difficult to park free in Queen's Gate. Total cost for two + Prom tickets = £25.72.
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Originally posted by cavatina View PostPersonally, I can't imagine living in a fourth-rate city in England any more than I could imagine being stuck in some ghastly hick burg in the middle of nowhere in America. Give me Manhattan or London any day, but to each his own.
I have been to one Prom. It cost £5 standing in the Gallery. I enjoyed it. But the entire outing cost about £150 for that one 2-hour concert + about 8 hours, walking, bussing, trains and tubes.
[The country would grind to a halt if we all 'chose' (supposing we had the choice) to live either in London or Simon's little Derbyshire village.]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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amateur51
Someone has already made the point (was it Ferret? - apols to whomsoever) that the principal problem is that the BBC no longer broadcasts the Proms directly - it has been 'outsourced' (dread term)
What needs to happen is for someone in Radio 3 to talk to an old BBC outside broadcast specialist about exactly what is wrong with the current set-up, from balances to spotlighting to the HD failure, or to get the old hand to do it on behalf of the BBC.
And before someone mutters 'budgets' they need to consider that the furore on this thread and others is in fact a reputational disaster for BBC Radio 3.
But there again, if people are striving to drive the market generally, and Radio 3 specifically downwards, maybe this would be music to their ears
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