Well
hello there... my, it's been a long, long time.
How'm
I doing? Well, I guess I'm doing fine.
Willie Nelson wrote that song, Funny How Time Slips Away. There are dozens of fine versions.
It's a simple, truthful song of enormous quality. Songs like that get
better with age. So do some radio stations, when they get the chance to grow into themselves. And
so do some people, who blossom over the years. I'll come back to that. I'm working up a podcast
series; I'll go into great detail in the next post.
I've used that couplet because I have been quiet of late on this blog. I've been not so much
under the weather as comprehensively flattened. It's taken me a while to wrestle myself back upright. So,
my apologies if you've been missing any, er, shining thoughts. Now, to the meat of this post...
Classical Music and the arts on the Radio. Under threat. Again.
Photo: Peter Hopper http://tinyurl.com/y2xupyjo |
I
wrapped up a six month consult gig in April this year. The job was to set up the initial library and scheduling database for Bauer Media's new Classical music station, Scala Radio. It was enormous
fun; it's work I love to do. What you heard at launch date was pretty
much what I had been beavering away on since September 2018.
I
would not have got that gig without experience gained twenty years
ago with the team at RTE Lyric FM. I worked with them, on and off,
for five years from 1998. Now, Scala's project was top secret when I
joined. So that made me a good fit, being the only person they could find in the UK with
Classical programming chops who wasn't at Radio 3 or Classic FM. I had
also worked in New York on the RCS gSelector scheduling engine, and
that came in useful too. I wrote the online help there. Since then, of course, it's been much
expanded to go with the program's development. And it was a strange thing to look afresh at the work I did
in 2009.
Lyric FM
Of course I didn't know it back in 1998, but the Lyric work opened the Scala door for me. Lyric
was the most fun place I ever worked for. There were, and I'm sure
there still are, some brilliant, articulate, eloquent broadcasters. The
Irish can put their English colleagues to shame with their use of
language when so minded. Lyric was bursting
with talent and enthusiasm. It's the only music station I worked at
where the majority of the staff actually made music. Over its twenty years, Lyric has been garlanded with awards at home and abroad. They run on a
shoestring budget. Lyric's funding to awards ratio must be one the
most respectable in Europe. But now for the bad news.
A casual remark on an RTE TV show last week suggests that RTE
are considering 'cutting' Lyric FM. It's all about costs: RTE are in even
deeper financial difficulties than the BBC.
It
must have been sickening to learn this information at third hand.
There's a part of me that wonders if the mooted decision to 'cut'
Lyric FM was helped by geography. Lyric is based in
Limerick; Most of RTE in based in Dublin. I know, to my cost, how capital city workers frequently regard work done
outside the capital with contempt. In the UK, it happened at Pebble
Mill in Birmingham time and time again. In fact, this week, In the Radio Times, John Sergeant bemoaned the fact that sometimes he was forced to travel outside London to do his BBC work. The poor lamb. It
must have been frightful. The provinces! I shudder for him.
Time for action?
Be
that as it may, the bald fact is that Lyric is under threat. And I
encourage you, wherever you are, to sign petitions, tweet and email
your support.
Lyric is bold and adventurous. It is also a nursery slope, a training ground and a solid platform for broadcast talent that is out of the ordinary. Lyric champions a wonderful range of music. It is the home for much of RTE's Arts coverage. And it is astonishingly good value. If you haven't done so yet, take a listen here.
Lyric is bold and adventurous. It is also a nursery slope, a training ground and a solid platform for broadcast talent that is out of the ordinary. Lyric champions a wonderful range of music. It is the home for much of RTE's Arts coverage. And it is astonishingly good value. If you haven't done so yet, take a listen here.
Here
are some links to follow and addresses to contact: both the basic facts and the
people who make the decisions. They need to hear from you if you care
about adventurous radio.
This link takes you to the facts as reported
CONTACTS
Dee
Forbes (Director General, RTE) Dee.Forbes@rte.ie
Richard Bruton (Minister for Communications) richard.bruton@oireachtas.ie
Richard Bruton (Minister for Communications) richard.bruton@oireachtas.ie
SOCIAL
MEDIA
On Twitter there is a group voicing their opinion: go to @RTÉlyricfm
On Twitter there is a group voicing their opinion: go to @RTÉlyricfm
And use the hashtags: #lyricfmpublicservicebroadcasting
#savelyricfm
CAMPAIGNING
And sign this petition
________________________________________________________________________
And sign this petition
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