Nicolette Fraillon was told she couldn’t be a conductor ‘because I was a woman’


Australian conductor Nicolette Fraillon says sexism is still an issue within the classical music scene.

Fraillon was the first woman in the world to conduct a ballet orchestra, and until December was the Australian Ballet’s chief conductor, a role she held for two decades.

Today, female conductors are still the exception.

“I think it’s improving, but … whilst we’re conscious of it and talking about it, we’re not where we need to be,” she told 7.30’s Laura Tingle.

“Anything that you can think of that’s been said about any woman in a leadership position, I have had said to me and said about me in the roles that I have played through my work.

“If you think of everything that any woman in a leadership position has said about the way you’re treated — think of Julia Gillard — where your hair is commented on, what you wear, how you look, if you are emotional in a performance. ‘See, it’s a woman. She’s emotional.’ 

“And I hadn’t thought about this when I wanted to be a conductor. I just wanted to be a conductor. I didn’t realise that having breasts would mean that would make that much more difficult in some way. 

“I just thought that’s what I wanted to be. I fell in love with conducting. It was one of those a-ha moments … I had that the first time I played in an orchestra, and the world came alive.”

Cate Blanchett plays a conductor in the film Tár.(Supplied: Focus Features)

Fraillon’s comments come amid controversy about the portrayal of a fictional female conductor in the new movie Tár, starring Cate Blanchett, who has already won plaudits — including an Oscar nomination — for her portrayal of a tyrannical, bullying conductor.

For many in the classical music sector, it has been troubling that the character is a woman, when there is a long history — almost a standard operating procedure in earlier decades — of such behaviour among the world’s leading male conductors.

Fraillon has not seen Tár, so didn’t want to comment on the film itself. But she said that she had “thought wistfully to myself why, for centuries, that was the case with very tyrannical male conductors who would exploit their power in terms of others”, and that it was sad it was a woman who was depicted.

“It is sad if there’s a movie finally about a female conductor, and we have had no recognition, and people haven’t thought about all the issues that face us, that the female in that movie is depicted in that way,” Fraillon said.

“I can understand, if that is the case, why there would be anger.”

‘It’s much better, but that’s not translating into more leadership positions’

Nicolette Fraillon says Australian audiences are now used to seeing female conductors.(Supplied)

Fraillon said she was initially told she was not allowed to study conducting “because I was a woman”.

She persevered, but once she was a conductor she had trouble finding someone who would hire her.

“I had people say to me, ‘I really like your work but I can’t employ you because you’re a woman.’

“That was confronting. Still is,” she said.

“When I started out in Europe, I was the only one. I was the first in every single theatre that I went into with every single orchestra.

“The reasons when I say, ‘Why can’t I do it?’ ‘Oh physically, you’re not up to it. Women can’t lead. Women can’t direct a large group of people.'”

These days, she says, female conductors are more accepted. 

“It is now more normal. Certainly in Australia, people are used to seeing female conductors,” she said.

“Players in the orchestra who might have found it difficult, confronting, challenging, largely in Australia have come to accept it.

“It’s much better, but that’s not translating into more leadership positions as chief conductors, artistic directors in this country and not across the world.”

Impact of COVID on the arts

Nicolette Fraillon with 7.30’s Laura Tingle.(ABC News: Tom Hancock)

Fraillon says she had been thinking for some time that 20 years was probably a good point at which to consider moving on from the Australian Ballet, but that COVID-19 had been particularly traumatic and exhausting.

“It was a very traumatic period for the world, but speaking on behalf of myself and my arts colleagues, I think there’s quite a lot of trauma that we haven’t actually yet had time to process because you’ve had to get on and do,” she told 7.30.

“But works that were postponed, cancelled, projects that people have worked towards for years — the number of people who lost work, jobs, have left the sector, because it just ended their capacity. They couldn’t pay bills, mortgages, support the family.

“I was in Melbourne at that time we were in all those endless lockdowns, concerned about dancers who, certainly in that first period of lockdown, physically were deteriorating, potentially to a point where they weren’t actually going to be able to recover and dance again; musicians who couldn’t practice because you’re either locked in with all the family at home and kids and homeschooling and everything else, but more importantly in an apartment building where if you practice, neighbours were also all locked in. That was really problematic.

“People who have worked for years and years and years and need to train every day, like sports people do, not able to practice for months on end, could be career-ending and was for many. 

“And all the works of art that didn’t happen, that the world didn’t see, that have gotten lost.”

Fraillon says COVID is still having an impact on the arts, with shows still having to be cancelled when too many people on stage or in the pit fell ill.

On the positive side, she says, COVID seems to have made many people appreciate the arts more.

“It did demonstrate, and particularly in places like Australia where politically perhaps, and even societally, we’re not as cognisant of the importance of the arts … and the difference that they make and what part in a civilised humane society the arts play … Everyone turned to music, classical music, in ways that they hadn’t; to music, to the arts, for solace, for emotional support,” she said.

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Classical music can be enjoyed by anyone


Jan. 23—As the music director and conductor of the Aiken Symphony orchestra, Dr. Scott Weiss has three priorities.

They include having “the highest quality orchestra we possibly can,” he told the Rotary Club of Aiken on Monday at Newberry Hall.

The others are “to provide the best entertainment value we possibly can” and “to play the greatest symphonic music ever written,” Weiss said.

In his opinion, the orchestra’s performances are something that anyone can appreciate.

“Classical music in some regards has sort of scared people off, with rules and by being sort of esoteric in terms of what they do,” said Weiss, who has been with the Aiken Symphony Orchestra since last July.

Some people think that “if you don’t understand it enough, you’re not going to enjoy it,” he continued. “But that is absolutely 180% against what I am. What I want the Aiken Symphony Orchestra to be is an orchestra that anybody, regardless of their background in classical music or symphonic music, can come and enjoy without having to know very much about it at all.”

To explain how such an appreciation is possible, Weiss mentioned examples from his own life.

“I love art, but I know very, very little about art,” he said. “I’m actually quite blissfully ignorant. I kind of enjoy not knowing that much about it because I can just decide whether I like it or not, and it doesn’t have to be informed by anything other than that.”

Weiss also loves wine even though his knowledge is limited.

“And this is how I feel about symphonic music,” he said. “You don’t have to know why you like it, you can just like it.”

To improve the Aiken Symphonic Orchestra’s quality, “we were able to acquire some free agents in the offseason,” Weiss told the Rotary Club. “The players in the orchestra come from Aiken, but they also come from a far-reaching geography beyond Aiken as well.” Among them are members of the Charleston Symphony, South Carolina Philharmonic, Greenville Symphony and Asheville (North Carolina) Symphony.

The Aiken Symphony Orchestra boosts its entertainment value with “world-class guest artists,” Weiss said.

During the current season, they include cellist Jonathan Swensen, who will perform with the orchestra Feb. 12 and Broadway star Aisha de Hass, whose appearance in Aiken is scheduled for May 14.

Swensen “is an up and coming cello superstar,” Weiss said.

Looking ahead to the Aiken Symphony Orchestra’s 2023-2024 season, he said the group would be “playing music that is not difficult to get your arms around.”

For more information, visit aikensymphonyorchestra.com.

2023 Oscar nominees announced for Original Score and Original Song


It was an early start for the Academy with its live reveal of this year’s Oscar nominees taking place at 5.30am Los Angeles time.

Actors Riz Ahmed and Allison Williams presided over the short telecast, which saw over 30 films nominated in the the major feature categories.

As with the recently announced BAFTA nominations, three films dominate the list, with Everything Everywhere All At Once in the running for eleven prizes, followed closely by both The Banshees of Inisherinand All Quiet on the Western Front with nine nominations each.

2023 Oscars – Original Score nominees

Those three films are represented in the Original Score category, with the band Son Lux earning their first ever Oscar nominations for Everything Everywhere All At Once (they got a song nod, too, see below) and Carter Burwell earning his third score nomination for The Banshees of Inisherin. Justin Hurwitz scooped two Oscar wins for La La Land in 2017, so with his nomination for Babylon he’ll be hoping for a third win.

Like the BAFTA music line-up, German composer Volker Bertelmann is up for a gong in recognition of his music for All Quiet on the Western Front, his second nomination following that which he shared for 2016’s Lion.

Unlike the BAFTA’s, veteran composer John Williams is nominated for his short and very sweet score for Steven Spielberg’s The Fabelmans. A few weeks away from his 91st birthday, the nomination is Williams’s 53rd. He last won an Oscar (his fifth) in 1994 for Schindler’s List, so a sixth is perhaps overdue?

2023 Oscars – Original Song nominees

The Original Song category features a handful of nominees this year, including the Golden-Globe-winning ‘Naatu Naatu’ from the Indian film, RRR. That song, by MM Keeravani, Kala Bhairava and Rahul Sipligunj, is joined by Top Gun: Maverick’s ‘Hold My Hand’ (by Lady Gaga, Bloodpop and Benjamin Rice), Black Panther: Wakanda Forever’s ‘Lift Me Up’ (by Tems, Rihanna, Ryan Coogler and Ludwig Göransson), ‘Applause’ from Tell It Like a Woman (a 14th nomination for songwriting legend Diane Warren) and ‘This is Life’ from Everything Everywhere All At Once (by Son Lux).

All will be revealed when the 95th Academy Awards take place in Los Angeles on Sunday 12 March.

Seaming – Mermaid – 5:4


Seaming To is an English singer and musician whose work seems to be the product of, to date, three distinct periods of activity. She was a guest vocalist on some singles in the early 2000s, followed by her own first EP, Soda Slow, in 2006. Then things went quiet until late 2012, when the EP Mermaid and her debut album Seaming were released. Then things went quiet again, until July last year when she released another EP, Natural Process, and her second album Dust Gatherers is due for release next month. i’m not going to speculate on the whys and wherefores of this stop-start creative progression, but i do want to spend just a little time exploring Mermaid.

In some respects its four brief tracks hint at the more expansive, polystylistic lyricism that characterises her debut album (released a month after the EP), but i actually prefer the more restricted, experimental tone that pervades Mermaid. It’s book-ended by tracks focusing on wordless vocalise. ‘Threads’ puts together sustained and undulating tones, clustering them in a middle register such that they sound somewhat constrained and muffled, even when higher tones appear later. It’s followed by the clunky plunky gamelan-evoking percussion of ‘Mermaid’, where an askew cabaret-like tune is impinged upon by assorted acoustic and electronic fragments.

Its upbeat tone is answered by the more languid, breathy ‘Tenderly’, a song where it seems as if the melody is an almost incidental or at most equal element among everything else. The “accompaniment” (for want of a better word), a cycling, occasionally varied or embellished, chordal idea played by soft winds, keeps going regardless, the voice finding its place in relation to this. Especially striking is the way the vocal line shifts into a very low register later on, only making the music live up more powerfully to its title. Mermaid ends with ‘Edge’, a more simple act of vocalise comprising a closely-focused centre with gentler upper and lower register voices, opening up halfway through to form a rich chorus.

Mermaid is available as a free download from Seaming’s Bandcamp site. And if this whets your appetite i’d highly recommend checking out last year’s excellent Natural Process EP, which suggests Seaming is moving into a more overtly experimental form of expression. It’ll be interesting to hear how (and if) this manifests on her forthcoming album.


Newport Classical presents Gabriela Martinez during Valentine’s Day week


While gray January is still upon us, Newport Classical will soon be celebrating Valentine’s Day with our next Chamber Series concert on Feb. 17 at the Recital Hall at Emmanuel Church, where we continue to present some of the world’s leading musicians year-round in an intimate and acoustically vibrant setting.

Venezuelan pianist Gabriela Martinez joins us on Feb. 17, to perform music by Rachmaninoff and Beethoven along with selections by young composers Caroline Shaw and Viet Cuong, as well as Brazilian composer Heitor Villa-Lobos. Versatile, daring, and insightful, Gabriela is establishing a reputation on both the national and international stages for the lyricism of her playing, her compelling interpretations, and her elegant stage presence. Since making her orchestral debut at age seven, she has played with distinguished orchestras around the world and her wide-ranging career includes world premieres of new music, live performance broadcasts, and interviews on TV and radio. We are excited to welcome her to Newport.

As part of our commitment to creating connections between classical music, the artists who perform it, and our Newport community, all of the musicians coming to Newport also perform for and speak with students during their time here, through our Music Education Residency initiative. Gabriela will be visiting Claiborne Pell Elementary School and introducing the students to the composers from her concert program and showing the similarities in musical language between composers of today and those from the core canon.

Gabriela Martinez

Additionally, thanks to a generous grant from the Gruben Foundation, we are pleased to be able to offer free student tickets for this concert as well as all of our Chamber Series performances! Email us at info@newportclassical.org to learn more.

Coming up in March, we will be announcing plans for our summer 2023 Newport Classical Music Festival, which runs from July 4-23. We can’t wait to share what a spectacular line-up we have this year, and look forward to returning to Newport’s mansions and historical venues for these one-of-a-kind performances.

In advance of her concert next month, we caught up with Gabriela Martinez to find out what she’s looking forward to about coming to Newport:

Newport Classical: Which piece on this program are you the most excited to perform and why? How do you curate programs for recitals?

Trevor Neal

Gabriela Martinez: I am so excited to perform pieces from my recital program Resonances. Resonances is a journey that invites us to explore the echoes within us. To explore the search and inspiration that happens beneath the surface. To explore where music takes us.

I love creating a story and an adventure to take. In my programs, I like including a mix of composers. This program features a collection of pieces by well-known composers such as Beethoven and Villa-Lobos and also by some incredible composers alive today – Viet Cuong and Caroline Shaw.

NC: Is there anything you are looking forward to doing in Newport?

GM: I have only been to Newport once for 24 hours, and I am so looking forward to going back! I hope to do the Cliff Walk, see the beaches, the beautiful mansions and architecture, and eat at local delicious restaurants!

NC: What will you be focusing on in your educational masterclass?

GM: I am really looking forward to working with the students. I am passionate about music education. I think having music in our lives is really important, and I am honored to be collaborating with these young artists!

Gabriela Martinez will be presented by Newport Classical at Recital Hall at Emmanuel Church, 42 Dearborn St. in Newport, on Friday, Feb. 17 at 7:30 p.m. Tickets can be purchased online at www.newportclassical.org. Be sure to join Newport Classical’s mailing list to be the first to know about upcoming concerts and events: www.newportclassical.org/email-sign-up

Trevor Neal is the Newport Classical director of artistic planning and engagement. Newport Classical’s column appears monthly on newportri.com and in The Newport Daily News.

This article originally appeared on Newport Daily News: Gabriela Martinez performs Newport Classical concert on Feb. 17

King Charles’ ‘magical’ Coronation Concert will show his love of classical music | Royal | News


Reports claim King Charles’ coronation concert is being planned to showcase the monarch’s love of classical music. The concert will take place on Sunday, May 7 as part of the long weekend to celebrate the coronation, and will be held one day after the official coronation ceremony on Saturday, May 6.

The BBC will be organising the coronation concert with the royal household, however, King Charles is said to be “actively involved and engaged in” the planning of every part of the coronation celebrations.

Speaking about the concert, tne royal source told the Telegraph that “there is no doubt that they want to put something on that the King, as well as other members of the Royal Family, will enjoy.”

The concert is expected to feature dancing and a laser light show which will showcase famous sites throughout the UK, and King Charles’s love of Shakespeare is also expected to be showcased.

King Charles has had a love of classical music all his life, and his royal patronages include the Royal Opera House, the Royal Philharmonic and the English Chamber Orchestra.

The coronation concert will consist of a 74-piece orchestra and will be led by the Massed Bands of the Household Division and will also have the Countess of Wessex’s String Orchestra performing.

The musicians will be providing the instruments for “some of the world’s biggest entertainers” and one source revealed the event will be “very orchestral”.

They said: “Party at the Palace for the Platinum Jubilee had such an eclectic line-up and the performers appeared with their own instruments and brought their own bands, this will be different but equally magical.”

The concert will also feature the Coronation Choir, which will feature people from across the UK, including amateur singers from local community choirs, refugee choirs, NHS choirs as well as LGBT and deaf singing groups.

READ MORE: Princess Kate follows a trend started by Diana

In Prince Harry’s memoir ‘Spare’, the royal revealed that King Charles invite him and his then-fiance, Meghan Markle, to Clarence House to help with the wedding music.

Prince Harry wrote: “As one piece ended, he’d quickly reload his wireless, begin humming or tapping his foot to the next, I knew Pa loved music, but I never knew he loved it this much.”

In the past, King Charles has said he first began to love music and the performing arts due to his grandmother, Queen Mother Elizabeth, who took him to see the Bolshoi Ballet at the Royal Opera House when he was seven years old.

The monarch said he found the event “completely” inspiring, and seemed to have an influence on him as he went on to learn how to play both the cello and trumpet at Gordonstoun and continued playing the cello in the orchestra at Trinity College.



Apple Music Classical Will Debut Next Week With iOS 16.3







© Provided by ScreenRant


Apple Music Classical, the company’s latest streaming service focused on the classical genre, is expected to debut next week with iOS 16.3. Though Apple didn’t meet their original target release date — it originally planned to launch Apple Music Classical by the end of 2022 — the service will be the latest in a slew of January releases. Apple acquired Primephonic in 2021, a niche music streaming service devoted to the classical genre. It took the streaming service offline shortly after but promised to launch its own dedicated classical music service. It’s been well over a year since that original announcement, and it appears Apple Music Classical is finally coming.

In a press release, Apple revealed that iOS 16.3 would be released next week. The company showcased new wallpapers and watch faces in celebration of Black History Month but said iPhone wallpapers wouldn’t be available until the iOS 16.3 update is rolled out. This is one of the rare times it is known precisely when an iOS update will be available. Twitter user iSoftwareUpdates found hints that Apple Music Classical would debut by looking through the source code of the developer beta version of the iOS 16.3 release candidate (RC).

Related: What Is ‘Apple Classical?’ Here’s What We Know So Far

Why Apple Music Classical Will Debut With iOS 16.3

With iOS 16.3 RC, Apple has modified and added some strings in the Music app about the now renamed Apple Music Classical,” the iSoftwareUpdates account wrote in a tweet. “It was just Apple Classical up until 16.3 beta 2.” The account also offered screenshots of iOS 16.3 RC code, showcasing a few places where Apple Music Classical appears.

Perhaps the most concrete evidence of the Apple Music Classical app’s expected debut yet is in the screenshots showing that Apple has added code that informs Apple Music users of the app. Prompts like “Open in Apple Music Classical” and “Explore this album in the app designed for classical music” signify the streaming service is nearing release. The code also shows shortcuts that can jump users from the mainstream Apple Music app to Apple Music Classical.

Although iOS 16.3 RC would suggest that Apple Music Classical will debut next week, this logic isn’t foolproof. For example, after users found traces of Apple Card Savings in a beta version of iOS 16.1, leading many to believe the feature would debut with iOS 16.1. The release came and went with no trace of Apple Card Savings, and the feature still isn’t available today.

Despite the uncertainty, the prominence of Apple Music Classical in the beta version of iOS 16.3 is strong evidence to suggest the service is debuting next week.

More: Does Apple Music Have Audiobooks? Listening Options, Explained

Source: Apple, Twitter / iSoftwareUpdates

Can BBC radio thrive in a new world of podcasts? | Radio 2


No one will win the top prize choice of bluetooth headphones or a smart speaker for simply knowing which Radio 2 DJ’s show has featured the Popmaster slot for 25 years. But the popular music quiz, like the show’s host, Ken Bruce, is now moving over to Greatest Hits Radio.

The mellow tones of Bruce, who last week announced he is to leave the BBC after 45 years, have provided the soundtrack for many lives, soothing ears in the kitchens, offices and cars and lorry cabs of Britain. Even so, the outcry that met news of his departure on social media seemed to suggest brutal and sinister forces were at work.

Fears that Bruce’s place could be taken by Scott Mills, a recent Radio 1 transfer, appear to haunt his fans. And when Rob Brydon, a comedian who boasts Bruce as one of his repertoire of impersonations, asked on Twitter for “privacy at this difficult time”, his joke acknowledged the central part that Bruce’s show has played in the listening habits of many.

Can one soft Scottish voice encapsulate the mood of a whole radio station? And are audiences really so loyal to a small, ageing group of DJs and presenters? Well, Radio 2 is about to find out. In the wake of the recent losses of Simon Mayo, Vanessa Feltz, Paul O’Grady and Steve Wright, stalwarts of almost equal measure, the station will be looking to steady the ship and reassure listeners.

“The fury about Ken and Steve Wright going has been interesting,” says Miranda Sawyer, Observer radio critic. “You would almost think it was the fault of Scott Mills, not simply that he has moved over to do a job he is perfectly qualified to do.”

The level of upset has exposed once again the deeply personal, if not intimate, relationship the public can have with a radio station. “The problem for Radio 2 is that his was the most listened-to radio programme in the country, with a bigger audience than Zoe Ball,” adds Sawyer. “Yet he is 71.”

It is true that an older white man’s graceful decision to step away in favour of newer talent would be welcomed in many creative industries. As Bruce said: “I have been here for quite a long time now, and it possibly is time to move over and let somebody else have a go.” But changes, whether due to commercial poaching or retirement, pose a particular problem to a radio station in the era of podcasts and streaming.

Woman’s Hour presenter Jenni Murray, who left the show in 2020. Photograph: Tricia Yourkevich/BBC/PA

Other BBC stations have lost key voices at an alarming rate. In the last few years, Radio 4 has waved goodbye to Today’s interrogator-in-chief John Humphrys, to PM’s Eddie Mair, to Start the Week host Andrew Marr and to regular Woman’s Hour presenters Jenni Murray and Jane Garvey. A new controller will also arrive at Radio 3 this March, a station where any change is always the focus of worry among classical music fans who already regard themselves as an endangered species.

“A lot of names have left the BBC recently,” notes Simon O’Hagan, radio writer for the Radio Times. “But if you were to switch to one of the five main stations, within seconds you would still know which one you were listening to, so I don’t think there’s been any real diminution in distinctiveness.”

If hidden forces are reshaping our listening habits, then O’Hagan suspects it has more to do with a broadening of listener appetites. “Genres have not collapsed, but the borders between them have collapsed a little. This morning I was listening to Radio 3’s Kate Molleson playing a Crosby, Stills & Nash track to mark David Crosby’s death, and talking about the way he grew up listening to Bach before becoming this big folk-rock figure. Now it’s possible a few listeners wondered what was going on, but there’s a loosening up that has happened, and that’s great. Radio stations must recognise the population has much more eclectic tastes.”

Sawyer also welcomes what O’Hagan describes as a “loosening of constraints”, but she recognises two persistent rival strands of listening behaviour. She says some people always have either Radio 4, Radio 3 or Radio 6 Music “chuntering on in the background” out of entrenched habit. But there are butterfly music fans like her, too, the kind who switch between stations in search of fresh sounds. And change has to come. “Radio 4’s schedules have stayed ludicrously the same really for 50 years, in spite of newer elements coming in,” Sawyer adds.

A former controller of the station, Mark Damazer, defends the value of this “core spine” of programming. “These warhorse programmes, such as Today, The World at One, Desert Island Discs, Woman’s Hour and The Archers stay the same while others change around them. Some come and go, and others, like More or Less, become established. This is not a radio station that likes to trumpet its changes. Its listeners don’t want to hear they’re in the middle of a revolution. They just absorb what happens.”

Steve Wright, who left his Radio 2 afternoon show in 2022. Photograph: BBC

Damazer believes recent directors-general of the BBC have each recognised that the personal impact of a radio station on a listener is different to a television channel. “There’s always been a distinction on that front. People don’t think of themselves as ‘a BBC One’ or ‘BBC Two’ person, because they are really a coalition of programmes, some of which an audience identify with. Radio is still different. The branding is much more fundamental and the station controllers are gatekeepers.”

Damazer argues that even the wholesale streaming of content on the Sounds app and the deluge of podcasts have not yet affected this bond significantly: “Of course, these brands will dissipate a little, and Sounds is a very good and necessary thing, but it does not yet have the same relationship to BBC Radio that iPlayer now has to BBC TV’s output.”

On the latest analysis, it seems most people are still listening live, although the margins are narrowing. In the third quarter of last year 54% tuned in for broadcasts, while 46% listened on demand on Sounds. Both those who enjoy speech radio and those looking for music now have the chance to schedule their own listening. Sawyer has also noted the way that “break-out” segments of particular radio shows now develop an independent following online, something Radio 1 has long been alive to.

For O’Hagan, the emergence of new cultural boundaries, amid all the new freedoms, is a concern. “Radio is becoming more fragmented, like everything else in entertainment. BBC Sounds can operate like a kind of Spotify service to create a string of our favourite programmes. But that might mean we’re not now hearing so many things by chance that surprise us. We might be putting up some barriers.”

On the whole, however, he believes the changing broadcast climate is inevitable and largely a good thing. “There has to be a conscious rejuvenation of radio, of course, and we are already getting hybrid podcast shows on live radio, adopting the podcast aesthetic and, to some extent, inviting listeners to step away from live broadcasting.”

If a “post-Bruce” Radio 2 wants to stay in charge, presiding over the “tracks of our lives”, it should take note of other subtle emotions at play, according to Sawyer. “Radio 2 used to play decent, middle-of-the-road pop, and that core sound is shifting towards 80s and 90s dance music, with a little less blue-eyed soul going on. I wonder how listeners feel about that. If you love 80s or 90s sounds, there are other niche stations you could go to, and the danger is that when you hear a song you liked when you were young, it can actually remind you that you are old.

“Perhaps what listeners really want to hear on Radio 2 are those songs they feel everyone already knows and which just seem timeless. The dance tracks from your youth, on the other hand, can be a reminder that you are not timeless, and that may not be appealing.”

Like any friendship, the business of maintaining the relaxed voice and brand of a radio station is nuanced. The chemistry, a balance that appeared to come naturally to Ken Bruce, is tricky and potentially volatile.

Classical music strikes a chord with Gen Zers | Ireland


If you were to guess what music the under-25s are listening to in Ireland, classical might not be too high on the list.

But a new generation of charismatic musicians such as Esther Abrami, with a little help from smash streaming shows such as Squid Game and Bridgerton, has helped the genre’s popularity to skyrocket among younger age groups.

Recent research has found that Generation Z and young Millennials are more likely than their parents to listen to orchestral music. According to the streaming giant Spotify, listening to classical tunes in the 18-25 age group has risen 6 per cent year-on-year in Ireland.

According to its figures, Gen Zers listen to more classical music than people aged 25-29 and 30-34, with the younger crowd

Music contest at Sri Krishna Gana Sabha


Mysore/Mysuru: Sri Krishna Gana Sabha, Gokulam 3rd Stage, has organised a music competition on Jan. 29 (Sunday) from 10 am at its premises.

Events are Classical Music (Vocal only): Bhavageethe or Bhaktigeethe for those aged 6 to 10 years (Sub-Junior); 11 to 15 years (Junior) and 16 to 25 years (Senior).

Classical Music for Sub-Juniors — Devotional Song or Devaranama; For Juniors (11-15 years) — Keerthane composed by one of the Trinities — Thyagaraja or Deekshitar or Shyama Sastrigal (Duration: not more than 5 minutes); For Seniors (16-25 years) – Composition by any one of the Trinities with Raaga and Swaraprastara (not more than 10 minutes).

First prize winners will get Rs.500, Second – Rs. 400 and Third – Rs. 300 with a memento and certificate. All the participants will be given certificates and a memento besides consolation prizes for the deserving.

Special cash prize of Rs. 3,000 for the winner and Rs. 2,000 for Runner-up in Senior Classical Music (Vocal) will be given and their concert will be held on Jan.30 at 6 pm.

Those interested may register their names in the Temple Office from 9 am to 11 am and from 6 pm to 8 pm between Jan.20 and 27. For details call Ph: 2411148 or 2510495 or Mob:82965-42363 or 98807-07190. Prizes will be distributed on Jan. 30 at 6 pm. Winners along with other selected youngsters will exhibit their talents. The event is sponsored by Dr. N. Chandrashekar, Managing Trustee, Aditya Hospital, Gokulam, according to a press release from B.S. Sridhara Raje Urs, Sabha President and J. Mahesh Secretary.