End in sight for Classical Collection?

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    End in sight for Classical Collection?

    Word is that Classical Collection's contract is coming to an end and R3 has put its 'morning strand' out to tender for 2011/12 (a new schedule after the Proms?). Even more interesting is that the new slot is apparently to be 9am to noon.

    Will there be an earlier start to Breakfast (back to 6am)? Or will Breakfast be shorter?

    I'm afraid applications for proposals closed last Tuesday so we're too late but do we have any suggestions as to a format for what looks like another 3-hour block?

    Will it be a dire mix of chat, guests and interactivity - or an opportunity for some longer pieces and informed introductions?
    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.

    #2
    6 to 9 a.m. eh? Not copying CFM then....

    Comment


      #3
      Originally posted by Ofcachap View Post
      6 to 9 a.m. eh? Not copying CFM then....
      I'm not saying Breakfast is going to be 6am to 9am. I'm saying it will apparently be stopping at 9am instead of 10. They would need to do some shifting about the previous evening to start B'fast at 6am.

      My suggestion has always been that Breakfast was too long - and that 90 minutes was plenty to get the few R3 outworkers out of the house in the mornings.

      But - good point - CFM changed its brekkie show from 8am-12pm to 6am-9am some months back. R3 hot on its trail?
      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


        #4
        Maybe instructive to look at the current CFM morning schedules since we know from personal experience that R3 pretends indifference but actually watches its rival - interesting that it sees CFM as a rival?- very closely.

        They change to John Suchet at 9.00 a.m. for four hours. Seems a more sensible time to break than the very silly R3 10 a.m.. Longer pieces do appear on the CFM show, but it is a similar but more populist mix of mainly shorts, extracts of obviouisly 'famous tunes' than Classical Collection but a very long country mile from CDM.

        Stephen Johnson's Sunday p.m. slot apart, R3 seemes to have almost totally lost sight of the educational /informational remit in terms of elucidation, analysis, still more forgotten the huge sound archive / back history in the recording business, and going with your thread, FF, about Do3 and the proximity of repeats to original tx, anything older than 3 yrs seems 'archival' to modern R3 programme makers.

        A more pragmatic view of who R3 thinks is its 9 - 12 demographic and its activity profile might be instructive. All this busy music for rushing about busy people getting kids off to school / getting to work in rush hour etc etc....? Erm, I don't think so according to R3's own figures. I would very much like to know the take-up of e.g. Through the Night, because it seems to me that that kind of straight mix of minimal intro + pieces, sometimes very long pieces, would interest me and I suspect others.

        The whole chat+trails+interaction guff is a waste of time and technoology. and if working at home, and I am busy with work that requires concentration, chat-based, trail-dogged and driven trivia is the very first thing I switch off.

        But I don't know why we are even thinking about this: eheu! But my guess is that it will simply be more of the same - or worse. The only plus might conceivably be that it might mean less of gushing Sarah Walker and the Nth degree smugness of James Jolly.

        Comment


          #5
          the Alexander Armstrong Show innit ... a shoe in .....

          they are defining a 'personality' market for the listener's ear, content is not the first or second issue compared to who and how much ... and then it will be how not to scare the punters .... 360 multiplatform digital drivel with a FACE
          According to the best estimates of astronomers there are at least one hundred billion galaxies in the observable universe.

          Comment


            #6
            Originally posted by DracoM View Post
            They change to John Suchet at 9.00 a.m. for four hours. Seems a more sensible time to break than the very silly R3 10 a.m.
            When the BBC thought for itself, the thinking was that 9am is a classic 'switch' time - when listeners think about changing to another station. So the idea was that there should be no proper break at 9am, in order to keep people tuned in. With a fairly seamless change, signalled by a pre-handover chat with the next presenter, it was hoped that people would "stay longer with the station" [sic].

            But it could indeed be that Suchet is now doing well at CFM. In which case the obvious thing for R3 to do is - go in the opposite direction, and leave the lighter stuff to CFM. No competition is - no competition
            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


              #7
              Originally posted by aka Calum Da Jazbo View Post
              the Alexander Armstrong Show innit ... a shoe in .....

              they are defining a 'personality' market for the listener's ear, content is not the first or second issue compared to who and how much ... and then it will be how not to scare the punters .... 360 multiplatform digital drivel with a FACE
              Right - this is our chance to have our say - the shortlisted presentations are to be given this coming week (Thur/Fri), decisions announced at the beginning of June. Erm, so I understand.

              So let's have some positive suggestions!
              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


                #8
                A consortium of Jane Glover, Verity Sharpe, Catherine Bott. Roger Vignoles, Stephen Johnson, Jonathan Swain come together to plan a month each of themed programmes. Included as part of the remit in each day or every other day is a 20 minute discussion slot with a called-in expert - say around coffee time say 1100hrs - on interpretations on record of a well known piece or section of a piece. Analytic, explanatory. Piece then played. Given the big audience that CDR gets, the BBC must know that there is a real hunger for that kind of interpretation ideas exchange, so why not use it, exploit it? Record industry would be keen too.

                The Radio Forum [ i.e. us] become the 'official ' messagebaord for responses to that segment - suggestions, comment etc - rather as AMcG used to look at the old R3 mbs before and during and after CDR.

                The Forum has a formidable array of truly knowledgeable experts / connoisseurs that could provide a real insight and support, would attract people with a bit of background as well as those hungry to extend and learn and become on ongoing hook per prog.

                Comment


                  #9
                  Originally posted by french frank View Post
                  Right - this is our chance to have our say - the shortlisted presentations are to be given this coming week (Thur/Fri), decisions announced at the beginning of June. Erm, so I understand.

                  So let's have some positive suggestions!
                  The thought of no more Jolly James on my radio is ... thrilling If it happens, could I suggest a week of street parties? (you did ask for postive suggestions, ff! )

                  I confess that I listen to TTN on the iplayer to replace the usually ghastly breakfast chumminess - sorry Rob & Sarah - and I think a re-jigged TTN-type programme would be worth trying, minimal chat & lots of interesting pieces and performances. Given that its content is from around the EU radio stations, you could call it 'Continental Breakfast' couldn't you. You could. You know you could ...

                  Then re-instate the Rob & Jon show please - it was such a good programme, so intelligent and interesting - to reinstate it is NOT just 'going back and being safe', imho it is also playing to your strengths, just as the re-instated 19.30 'live' concerts broadcasts are. The current lunchtime-to-Sean format works for me; Sean will always have his fans and his detractors.

                  I confess that I tend to tune out bedwards after 22.00 but I often drift in & out to TTN.

                  I hope that this is sufficiently positive, and all power to others with bigger & better suggestions

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Simple.
                    Extend Through the Night until 9.00 a.m.

                    Comment


                      #11
                      I think the worst possible option would be a long 3-hour magazine programme running each day for five days a week. Whoever the presenter was, even if it changed around, the format would quickly get tired and the usual gimmicks/trails/interactive stuff would begin to dominate in an intrusive way. I don't really like the idea of a fixed slot having the same format day after day. But if it must be, then here are my suggestions:

                      The core of the programme, say 10.20 - 12.00 would be a deferred broadcast concert: in the summer, taken from the many festival concerts on throughout the UK; in the winter, from other festivals around the world (in partnership with other radio stations, including the European ones). It would be purely music, with the briefest of introductions and no interval.
                      The first part of the programme would be "Artist Focus" which would be a sort of artist counterpart to CotW and could feature solo artists, singers, conductors, chamber ensembles etc. This would feature recordings from the featured artist(s) as well as possibly a brief introduction to their career and interviews, etc.

                      Pace Am51, I don't think a rerun of CD Masters would work now. It was good in its time, but that time has passed, and the different style that RC in particular has adopted would sit uneasily with the format.
                      Last edited by aeolium; 15-05-11, 11:37. Reason: Duplication

                      Comment


                        #12
                        9-12 is a long slice of the day so variety is key ... say kick off with recorded Proms and other BBC archives 75 mins; fifteen minute interview conversation on current developments in music; 45 mins on new releases, new compositions, new performers; 15 minutes talk by a specialist; 30 mins themed selection or documentary, composer, artist, country, city etc ... [remember Satie and Paris]

                        tone of interview and talk serious, academic authoritative or polemical, presentation style Klein/Derham/Handley/Skeeping friendly and informed

                        Title: Music Today

                        that will be a £5 please ....
                        According to the best estimates of astronomers there are at least one hundred billion galaxies in the observable universe.

                        Comment


                          #13


                          Simple
                          Just one day per week an Early Junction / Wold on Tree / Calum's Jazz Selections
                          Enrichment for the wide-awake listener.
                          £5 for the board jazz man

                          Comment


                            #14
                            Originally posted by aeolium View Post
                            I think the worst possible option would be a long 3-hour magazine programme running each day for five days a week. Whoever the presenter was, even if it changed around, the format would quickly get tired and the usual gimmicks/trails/interactive stuff would begin to dominate in an intrusive way. I don't really like the idea of a fixed slot having the same format day after day. But if it must be, then here are my suggestions:

                            The core of the programme, say 10.20 - 12.00 would be a deferred broadcast concert: in the summer, taken from the many festival concerts on throughout the UK; in the winter, from other festivals around the world (in partnership with other radio stations, including the European ones). It would be purely music, with the briefest of introductions and no interval.
                            The first part of the programme would be "Artist Focus" which would be a sort of artist counterpart to CotW and could feature solo artists, singers, conductors, chamber ensembles etc. This would feature recordings from the featured artist(s) as well as possibly a brief introduction to their career and interviews, etc.

                            Pace Am51, I don't think a rerun of CD Masters would work now. It was good in its time, but that time has passed, and the different style that RC in particular has adopted would sit uneasily with the format.
                            Just to be contary, aeolium, I think that Rob would have Roger's hand ioff if a returm to CDM was suggested and I think that JS wouldn't be far behind. I regard Rob's recent style as 'a broadcasting artist's reply to just criticism' - it isn't him & never will be

                            I like your deferred broadcast concert idea

                            Comment


                              #15
                              Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View Post
                              Simple.
                              Extend Through the Night until 9.00 a.m.

                              Comment

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