Viewing entries in
music

Comment

6music Saved - Victory Is Ours

Victory is ours.

The BBC Trust has saved BBC 6 Music from closure.

That boiling hot day I spent in central London in May was not a futile middle class jolly after all.  The people that mattered - the suits we were all sceptical about, actually took notice of us.

Four months of countless blogs and demonstrations paid off.  I’d like to express my huge thanks to those who organised the relentless demos, notably 38 Degrees and love6music. You did a great job.

I suspect the whole ‘movement’ helped sway the BBC Trust, even those I’ll just click a button Facebook ‘petitions’ and Twitter posts, but clearly it was the intelligence of the argument, not just the passion which won through.

Those of us who completed the online strategy review questionnaire and also wrote directly to the BBC Trust must have overwhelmed the committee.  Of nearly 50,000 responses to the BBC Strategy Review (which included the proposed axing of the Asian Network and some online services), 78% were related to 6music.

The BBC Trust said today:

"Throughout the period of our consultation we have received no evidence from the commercial radio sector to suggest that 6 Music represents any kind of threat either now or in the future, so long as it remains true to its distinctive remit."

This, of course, was the heart of our argument.  By implication, the Trust has accepted that you simply wouldn’t hear anything remotely like 6 Music’s output anywhere else.

I’m not one for knee-jerk demands for resignations but I hope BBC Director General Mark Thompson is now reflecting on this saga.  Recommending the closure of a strand of the BBC that is precisely what the BBC is about (it is a perfect fit for the BBC Charter) was so misguided. 

Anger is misplaced today though.  

It is a day for celebration, and as Andrew Collins agreed with his first choice of song this afternoon, a Kool and the Gang one at that.

Comment

2 Comments

Martin Rossiter Returns

Hang out the bunting, tickle your fancy and attempt a chord change on a vuvuzela. Five years after the break-up of Gene - one of my favourite bands, their frontman Martin Rossiter is back.

Twice.

Not only is he performing bass / keyboard duties as part of Brighton-based quartet Call Me Jolene, he's also preparing some solo material.  

A video of him performing the Gene classic Olympian in May has been YouTubed, but more excitingly yesterday he released his first new solo material online with the song Drop Anchor. Typically gorgeous it is too:

Linkage:

Martin Rossiter on Twitter

Martin Rossiter on Facebook where I'm playing at being pretend friends:

Welcome back Martin.  You've been missed.

2 Comments

Comment

6music demo - London 22 May 2010

A week ago I rallied for fair votes. Yesterday I declared my support for the BBC radio station 6music at Broadcasting House in London at the event organised by love6music.com, and reported in today’s Independent.

Fear that I’m turning into Arthur Scargill is tempered by my experience of both events being impossibly polite, good natured and yes downright middle class.  Yesterday, several people even brought cakes.  Militant insurrection was not on the agenda.  

A blisteringly hot midday sun shone down on some excellent speeches.

Liz Kershaw opened with a convincing argument against the Rajars, Cerys Matthews (of all people) stirred us up with patriotic rhetoric and Ed Byrne hit the main point that the proposed closure of one of the BBC’s most culturally significant offerings is such a nonsense: 

Collins & Herring were just... Collins & Herring, brilliantly diverting into a bit of Collings & Herrin for good measure, with Richard definitely not swearing because of the children present.  I love these guys:

I first wrote some pomposity about this proposal in March.  Having listened to the speakers yesterday I’ve reviewed my thoughts (particularly on the demographic issue) but my overall opinion is now stronger than ever.  My email has been sent to the BBC and I’ve filled in the survey.  

You should do the same if the intelligent celebration and development of music, culture and creativity in the digital age means anything to you.  Do it no later than tomorrow (Monday 24 May 2010) as the consultancy period closes on Tuesday.

Other than making yourself feel better about declaring your support to strangers and friends, tweeting and joining a Facebook petition will have no effect at all when it comes to the BBC Trust review.

Thanks to all involved in organising yesterday and for sharing the videos I’ve used here.  love6music has plenty of other photos from the day and they also have all you need to know on what to do.  Please do it.  

 

Comment