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Musicians on Television: Visible, Audible and Ignored

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 January 2020

Abstract

This article focuses on the prominent anxieties generated by television broadcasts of musicians from the 1930s onwards. It explores three specific issues: first, a concern that television images of performing musicians are detrimental to the experience of music; second, negative judgments about the consequences of television sound quality; and, third, fears that musical value is undermined by the distracted character of television reception. Focusing on these particular points, the article also raises a series of more profound questions about how various strategies of looking and listening influence our understanding of music.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © 2006 Royal Musical Association

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Footnotes

I would like to thank the two anonymous referees for their comments and suggestions, which helped me clarify some of the ideas presented here. Special thanks to Katharine Ellis and my Goldsmiths colleague Tony Pryer for their very careful and constructive critiques of an earlier draft.

References

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5 Experimental television broadcasts had been demonstrated from the late 1920s and into the early 1930s. The first public broadcasts were in Britain. In the USA public broadcasts commenced during 1939 in New York City.Google Scholar

6 These descriptions are from the first Radio Times television supplement, initially distributed only in the London area with the edition published on 30 October 1936.Google Scholar

7 Details can be found in copies of the Radio Times held at the British Library Newspaper Library, Colindale, London.Google Scholar

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