And whether or not people are or are not able, physically and financially, to go to a Prom is utterly irrelevant to the point that R3 listeners have every right to complain if the quality of the radio broadcast is poor. The Proms are run by the BBC and every Prom is broadcast live. Licence-fee payers around the country pay for the BBC including R3 and the BBC orchestras. The Proms themselves are heavily subsidised by those licence-fee payers. It is a simply ridiculous argument to say, if you are not happy with the quality of the BBC radio broadcast you should go to the concert. If the BBC are going to broadcast the concerts then they should provide decent audio quality.
Can you get to the Proms?
Collapse
X
-
Originally posted by aeolium View PostAnd whether or not people are or are not able, physically and financially, to go to a Prom is utterly irrelevant to the point that R3 listeners have every right to complain if the quality of the radio broadcast is poor. The Proms are run by the BBC and every Prom is broadcast live. Licence-fee payers around the country pay for the BBC including R3 and the BBC orchestras. The Proms themselves are heavily subsidised by those licence-fee payers. It is a simply ridiculous argument to say, if you are not happy with the quality of the BBC radio broadcast you should go to the concert. If the BBC are going to broadcast the concerts then they should provide decent audio quality.
I live in Shepherd's Bush and so - according to some - could easily go to the Proms. The 'possibility' of that is irrelevant. I loathe the RAH and the whole "Proms" experience; I love listening to (some) Proms on the radio. That is what the BBC should be delivering: it is a Broadcasting organization, its putting-on of live concerts is secondary. How many in the RAH? How many listening on the radio?
Comment
-
-
David Underdown
Don't forget though that those listening in person do also contribute a significant proportion of the cost of the season, even though the numbers are relatively smaller. And in fact as has been argued on other threads, when you look at the costs per hour of the material with which the BBC can then fill significant amounts of broadcast time, the Proms is actually a very cheap way of filling the schedules (and that's only looking at TV broadcasts, the Radio 3 coverage could almost be said to be free)
Comment
-
cavatina
Originally posted by aeolium View PostIf the BBC are going to broadcast the concerts then they should provide decent audio quality.
Just because we've got a handful of people around here screaming bloody murder about how all the audio engineers deserve to be lined up and shot doesn't mean they're being in any way objective, or that their standards of quality are in any way representative. It seems a bit like you're all demanding the finest quality possible-- which I suppose is only fitting--but are your demands honestly within reason? Oh well.
Crumbs! Some of us hicks have to live in fourth-rate cities (10th-rate by Anna's standards! ). So that should raise the hackles of a fair number of UK cits.
Anyway, I'm sure that colours my views enormously. And now that you mention it, my hackles are raised by all the "stupid dirty foreigners" comments around here, so there you go.Last edited by Guest; 31-08-11, 13:30.
Comment
-
cavatina
Is there any aspect at all of the BBC, Radio 3 or the Proms which you're prepared to allow the people who pay for them to criticise without being challenged? If people pay for the services, their 'agenda' is obvious.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.
Comment
-
-
amateur51
Originally posted by cavatina View PostDo you really think SIS would do a deliberately substandard job when, as a contractor, they risk losing the contract and being replaced? Surely they're trying the best they can with the resources and personnel they have; whether or not that's good enough to be renewed isn't for you or me to say.
SIS may not deliberately plan to do a substandard job, but if BBC has got rid of the old-timers who knew what they were doing, who's to tell SIS they're doing substandard job?
Maybe the people who pay for it and appreciate high standards?
Us!!
Comment
-
cavatina
Originally posted by french frank View Postcavatina
Is there any aspect at all of the BBC, Radio 3 or the Proms which you're prepared to allow the people who pay for them to criticise without being challenged? If people pay for the services, their 'agenda' is obvious.
As someone who's infinitely more hypersensitive and irritable than most, I find I need to second-guess myself like this all the time: so often, what seems a reasonable complaint to me is radically out of step with everyone else's judgment. Telling professionals how to do their jobs seems risky at best, the absolute height of overweening narcissistic arrogance at worst.
A lot of us could do with a little more consideration and humility around here, myself most definitely included.
Comment
-
cavatina
SIS may not deliberately plan to do a substandard job, but if BBC has got rid of the old-timers who knew what they were doing, who's to tell SIS they're doing substandard job?
Maybe the people who pay for it and appreciate high standards?
Us!!
Comment
-
amateur51
Originally posted by cavatina View PostGood point; fair enough. Still, I'm sure if any engineer is going to find what's written around here useful, it's in everyone's interest if we provide more thoughtful, careful, detailed analysis and a lot less generic heated blather. Reasoned specifics, not irate generalities.
As a former boss of mine would have said 'It's Roger's balls that are on the shovel for this one and I'm going to make sure that he's fully aware of that' Do excuse the quango-demotic
Perhaps a letter or a petition to Lord Patten?
Comment
-
Very true, but one man's "decent" is another man's "dire". Do you really think SIS would do a deliberately substandard job when, as a contractor, they risk losing the contract and being replaced? Surely they're trying the best they can with the resources and personnel they have; whether or not that's good enough to be renewed isn't for you or me to say.
Just because we've got a handful of people around here screaming bloody murder about how all the audio engineers deserve to be lined up and shot doesn't mean they're being in any way objective, or that their standards of quality are in any way representative. It seems a bit like you're all demanding the finest quality possible-- which I suppose is only fitting--but are your demands honestly within reason? Oh well.
I live in Shepherd's Bush and so - according to some - could easily go to the Proms. The 'possibility' of that is irrelevant. I loathe the RAH and the whole "Proms" experience; I love listening to (some) Proms on the radio. That is what the BBC should be delivering: it is a Broadcasting organization, its putting-on of live concerts is secondary. How many in the RAH? How many listening on the radio?
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by cavatina View PostTelling professionals how to do their jobs seems risky at best, the absolute height of overweening narcissistic arrogance at worst.
Could one just, gently, say that the audio quality frequently leaves quite a bit to be desired?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.
Comment
-
-
cavatina
By contrast, you have presumably heard none of the broadcasts, since you attend all the concerts. So once again you are responding to the arguments of those (including people knowledgeable about audio engineering) who have experienced poor broadcast quality for some of the concerts with assumption and assertion based on no evidence whatsoever, not even that of your own ears.
For you, apparently, it is simply impossible for R3 to do any wrong.
Comment
-
David Underdown
Who is subsidising who? as I hinted in a previous post, it's not as simple as it appears. On the other hand, while the engineers are indeed surely not seeking to produce substandard output, it does seem likely that some specialist knowledge has been lost in the transfer. The current providers are not, as has been pointed out, from a music background (though if course, some if the employees may be). Without knowing the details of the contract how can we know how likely it is that the contract can actually be terminated, and if technical deficiencies can be seen surely it's important to feed this back to the BBC so they can take the matter up with their contractors?
Comment
-
You presume wrong. At night, I've been downloading some concerts to my hard drive and ripping the time limitations out of them so I can keep them forever. It's part of what keeps me awake till three or four in the morning, really. Oh, and I've also been using the I-player in the mornings when I want to hear a particular piece again.
if technical deficiencies can be seen surely it's important to feed this back to the BBC so they can take the matter up with their contractors?
Comment
-
-
Anna
Originally posted by cavatina View PostGood point; fair enough. Still, I'm sure if any engineer is going to find what's written around here useful, it's in everyone's interest if we provide more thoughtful, careful, detailed analysis and a lot less generic heated blather. Reasoned specifics, not irate generalities.
Originally posted by cavatina View PostNot to put too fine a point on it, but when was the last time you had a hearing test? (Isn't it possible that getting older has left you more "capped" than you used to be?) Perhaps the Great Mystery of the Missing Frequencies could be solved with a simple trip to your otologist.
Obviously, nobody at the BBC has your exquisite, super-aesthete Des Esseintes-like sensitivities, so perhaps you need to get used to living in this hopelessly coarse world of ours, accept that radio isn't an ideal medium for audiophile purists, get a grip, and move on. Works for me!
Comment
Comment