Meetings April 15th & 17th, CHUO funding drive, Adbusters media articles, CBC Radio 2 changes and resistance April 10, 2008
Posted by mediamattersottawa in Challenging Mainstream Media, Events, Independent Media, Media Matters Projects, Media News.trackback
Greetings everyone!
Today’s email includes:
- next Media Matters & postering meetings
- CHUO funding drive (& chance to support Media Matters)
- Adbusters new issue featuring articles on media issues!
- Raise a Ruckus for CBC Radio Two (Friday the 11th at noon at Queen & Sparks Streets)
——————————
Next meetings: Tues April 15, Thurs April 17
The next full Media Matters meeting will be at 6:30 on Tuesday the 15th, at the OPIRG-Ottawa office (631 King Edward Ave. 3rd floor)
The postering group (maybe to soon become it’s own action group!?) will be meeting Thursday the 17th, also at 6:30, also at the OPIRG-Ottawa office.
——————————
CHUO 89.1 FM ’s funding drive!
CHUO is currently holding their funding drive, and it runs this year until April 13th. Tune in, dial in, and pledge to support them, to keep the station on the air and support all the volunteering programming they broadcast out onto the airwaves. More info at http://chuo.fm
You can also support CHUO and Media Matters at the same time. To promote our soon-to-be-launched blog/website, Media Matters is thinking of purchasing some advertising on CHUO, at a rate of $15 per 30-second ad (possibly $12 per ad if we buy enough). If you would like, instead of pledging directly to CHUO, you can donate to Media Matters purchase of CHUO airtime – contact us and we’ll let you know how (and you’ll be getting a tax receipt from OPIRG for your donation). We are also considering directing our advertising dollars to other local independent media;
so any donations could also go towards other (independent and deserving) options.
——————————
Adbusters feature media articles
The new Adbusters magazine has one of the Aspers on the cover, in boxing gloves, with a black eye. Articles inside explore the Asper’s CanWest media corporation, as well as other perspectives on media issues, including short interviews with both Noam Chomsky and Robert McChesney.
The http://Adbusters.org website doesn’t yet have these articles up, so you’ll either have to wait, or go and get a physical copy of the magazine (note: Adbusters is available in the OPIRG resource centre, 631 King Edward Ave, 3rd floor)
——————————
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
On Friday, April 11th, 2008 at 12:00pm Eastern Time, the 12,500 strong members of a hastily arranged Facebook group entitled “Save Classical Music at the CBC” will be holding a NATIONAL DAY OF ACTION called “RAISE A RUCKUS FOR RADIO TWO!” in over a dozen cities across Canada.
In response to recently announced programming changes at CBC Radio Two and the planned axing of the famed CBC Vancouver Radio Orchestra, classical music fans, musicians and Radio Two listeners are planning to take to the streets in front of their local CBC installations in every province simultaneously.
Demonstrations are to be held at CBC facilities in Victoria, Vancouver, Edmonton, Calgary, Saskatoon, Winnipeg, Toronto, London, Ottawa, Montreal, Halifax, Charlottetown and St. John’s; with possible demonstrations to be held in Regina, Kingston, ON, and Saint John, NB as well.
Disappointment with the planned changes has been swiftly building and increasingly vocal since the CBC’s announcement of March 4th, where top executives including Richard Stursberg – head of CBC English services, Jennifer McGuire – head of CBC radio, and Mark Steinmetz – director of radio programming divulged that CBC Radio Two’s 40 year tradition as a primarily classical music broadcaster would be coming to a close. Weekday classical music programming is to be cut from 12 hours daily to 5 off-peak hours leading to the cancellation of many popular shows. Though listeners realize that shows and hosts come and go, most of the quality programming is to be replaced with pop music with sprinklings of light jazz and world music. Classical music fans and musicians feel as though they have lost a trusted and beloved member of the family – they feel like they are being punished for CBC’s inability to stay true to its history and mandate.
Since coming into power, the current team of Programming Executives have been responsible for the fact that:
-They have failed to transform the innovative Radio 3 into a national broadcast network, thereby necessitating, in their eyes, the gutting of Radio Two’s classical programming in order to satisfy their self-perceived mandate to be all things to all people.
-The CBC Young Composers Competition and the CBC Young Performers Competition, have been suspended for the past four years. These two important domestic competitions had been instrumental in the development of some of Canada’s best musical talent including: Angela Hewitt, Ben Heppner, Jon Kimura Parker. The Canada Council provided the funding for the $10,000.00 grand prizes.
-The CBC has, as of February, erased the classical music budget for CBC Records, precisely on the eve of their first Grammy win by Canadian violinist James Ehnes and the Vancouver Symphony Orchestra under Bramwell Tovey on the CBC Records label. Many artists, such as Measha Brueggergosman, launched their careers on a CBC Records label recording.
-The commissioning budget previously devoted to commissioning new works from composers is now spread out to cover jazz, pop musicians, and some unspecified amount of contemporary music. CBC says they will spend the same amount on classical commissions – but their track record is not looking good.
-The proposed cuts for the Fall of 2008 represents further reductions in classical music content, eliminating classical music 6am to 10am and 3pm to 6pm – reducing by over half the overall classical weekday programming from 12 hours to 5 hours, and shifting all weekday classical programming to inconvenient, off-peak times of the day when no one who works or goes to school can tune in.
-The axing of the 70 year old CBC Radio Orchestra: North America’s last remaining radio orchestra and platform for countless premieres of new Canadian compositions. And then, one day after citing lack of resources as the reason for cutting the orchestra, buying an expensive full-page ad in a national newspaper to convince Canadians about how wonderful the evisceration of their national radio music network is – signed and supported by wealthy pop music recording industry executives and artists, the people who stand to gain monetarily from the demise of CBC’s classical programming
All existing and long-standing weekday classical shows on Radio Two are to be cut, including:
-Music & Company – Tom Allen’s morning wake up show
-Here’s to You – Catherine Belyea’s all-request show
-Studio Sparks – due to the venerable Eric Friesen’s “retirement”
-Disc Drive – Jurgen Gothe’s popular, 30 year old drive-home show
-Sound Advice – Rick Philips’ extraordinarily informative and unique classical recording showcase and review
These changes come on the heels of last years round of cuts to vital programs such as:
-Danielle Charbonneau’s much-loved Music for a While;
-Larry Lake’s new composer showcase Two New Hours;
-Symphony Hall – Canada’s live orchestra recording showcase;
-The Singer and the Song – Catherine Belyea’s excellent Classical vocal program;
-Northern Lights – the overnight Classical program beloved by Night Owls everywhere;
-The reformatting of In Performance- a primarily classical live performance show into the unfocused Canada Live – a uniformly non-classical and completely confusing mix of World music, soft pop, and lounge Jazz;
The CBC claims financial constraints drive these cuts, yet spending in other areas, and support from the commercial recording industry suggest otherwise.
Canadian classical music fans and musicians and Radio Two listeners have had enough of this “concerted” and unprecedented campaign against classical and art music programming and infrastructure. Though their numbers may be relatively small compared to commercial radio, Radio Two listeners are among the most engaged and loyal in the world. They feel the have been betrayed and belittled by the current management team entrenched at the nation’s public broadcaster.
We are expecting a large and vocal turnout at CBC installations across Canada, in every province where Radio Two is heard and loved. These demonstrations will occur simultaneously at 1200hrs Eastern Time (9am in Vancouver, 1:30pm in St. John’s, etc.). We are inviting all lovers of classical music and public support for the non-commercial arts scene in this country to join with us in calling for the restoration of Radio Two’s vital classical music programming and the reversal of the decision to axe the CBC Radio Orchestra. Let our voices ring out and be heard! We welcome and encourage all members of the print, radio, electronic and television media to cover this important story and join us on this important day for Canada’s classical music community.
**********************************
The following is a list of local CBC installation addresses across Canada where demonstrations are being planned, including local times and local contact information:
[Note: Media Matters has taken the contact info off of this page due to spam considerations]
9amPacific: Victoria: 1025 Pandora Avenue
9am Pacific: Vancouver: 775 Cambie Street
10am Mountain: Calgary: 1724 Westmount Blvd. NW
10am Mountain: Edmonton: 23 Edmonton City Centre, 10062-102nd Avenue
10am Sask: Saskatoon: CBC 144 2nd Ave South
10am Sask: Regina: 2440 Broad Street
11am Central: Winnipeg: 541 Portage Avenue
12pm Eastern: Toronto: 250 Front Street West
12pm Eastern: London, ON: 208 Piccadilly Street
12pm Eastern: Ottawa: 181 Queen Street, Ottawa – Meeting at Sparks Street entrance
12pm Eastern: Montreal: 1400 Rene Levesque East
1pm Atlantic: Saint John: 560 Main Street
1pm Atlantic: Halifax: 1601 South Park
1pm Atlantic: Charlottetown: 430 University Avenue
1:30pm Newfoundland: St John’s: 25 Henry Street
Links and Web Resources:
Save Classical Music at the CBC
http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=9009203294
Save the CBC Radio Orchestra
http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=10103441879
Vancouver composer, John Oliver’s Ad Campaign Site
http://standonguardforcbcradio.earsay.com/
La Scena Musicale’s list of web articles:
http://www.scena.org/columns/spotlight.asp?lan=2&flag=1&id=79
Save the CBC Orchestra
http://savecbcorchestra.com/
Save the CBC
http://www.savethecbc.ca/
For more general information, please contact Peter McGillivray – radio2@petermcgillivray.com
Comments»
No comments yet — be the first.