RNZ Concert

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RNZ Concert
Te Reo Irirangi o Aotearoa Concert
File:RNZC logo.png
Broadcast area New ZealandNew Zealand
Frequency FM: Various

Freeview: Channel 51
Sky Digital: Channel 502

Live Stream Windows Media
First air date 1975
Format classical and jazz music
Owner Radio New Zealand
Webcast Live stream
Website radionz.co.nz/concert

RNZ Concert or Radio New Zealand Concert (Te Reo Irirangi o Aotearoa Concert), known as Concert Radio until 2007, is a publicly funded non-commercial New Zealand FM fine music radio network. It is owned and operated by Radio New Zealand from its Wellington headquarters. The network's playlist of classical, jazz , contemporary and world music includes an extensive and growing collection of original recordings of mostly local musicians and composers. Around 15 percent of its airtime is given over to live concerts, orchestral performances, operas, interviews, features and specialty music programmes, many of which are locally recorded.[1][2]

The network's specialist production department also commissions work, initiates music programmes, and records live broadcasts of concerts and recitals from local and visiting international artists. RNZ Concert is one of the few recipients to date of the Arts Foundation of New Zealand Governor's Award - a rare honour bestowed on individuals and organisations that make a significant contribution to the arts in New Zealand.[3] Radio New Zealand Concert also draws content from its international counterparts, including ABC Classic FM, the European Broadcasting Union, the WFMT Radio Network and BBC Radio 3.[4]

History

Early history

This was the Concert Programme logo when it was launched in 1975.

New Zealand radio stations were streamlined in the 1950s into three distinct call signs. Light popular entertainment stations came under ZB and mixed or middlebrow stations were identified as YA. There were also four highbrow YC stations taking on the model of the BBC's Third Programme - 1YC in Auckland, 2YC in Wellington, 3YC in Christchurch and 4YC in Dunedin.[5] Both YA and YC stations began taking networked programming from Wellington that matched their particular format, in place of local or regional programmes. The YA stations were rebranded as the National Programme in 1964, but it was not until 1975 that YC stations officially formed the Concert Programme.[6]

The growth of private commercial radio and Radio New Zealand's commercial assets by the fourth National government changed the environment in which the Concert Programme operates. Radio New Zealand became a Crown entity, with the Concert programme being one of the few services it continued to operate.[7][8][9] Until the launch of the AM Network in 1997, the network carried live coverage of the proceedings of the New Zealand Parliament.[6]

Recent history

Since 2000, the network has aired a New Year's Day countdown from an annual survey of New Zealand's 65 most popular fine music tracks. First-placed pieces have included Handel's Messiah and Schumann's Konzertstuck first movement, and a majority of high-ranking pieces have come from English composers.[10] The highest-ranked pieces are performed live by the Auckland Philharmonic Orchestra during the previous November, at concerts hosted by well-known New Zealanders like John Campbell and Wallace Chapman.[11] A print advertising campaign showing the musical scores of popular tracks depicted as battle scenes has been used to promote the countdown since 2012.[12]

On 22 January 2007 Concert FM was renamed Radio New Zealand Concert to associate it more clearly with the Radio New Zealand brand.[6] Since 2008 it has been under the management of former radio documentary-maker and music educator Roger Smith, a member of the music advisory committee of Lilburn Trust.[13] As part of its promotion of New Zealand Music Month, the network has produced a series of podcasts of New Zealand performances of classic works.[14] Through the Soundz Centre for New Zealand Music Trust's Resound Project, NZ On Air contributes $130,000 each year towards local recordings for the Concert programme.[15]

War commemorations

RNZ Concert is involved in several events commemorating the ANZAC Gallipoli Campaign.

The Concert network has been involved in several contests and performances commemorating Anzac Day and the centenary of World War I. In 2014, it broadcast a concert featuring the five finalists of a one-off secondary school song-writing competition - 'The Calling' - in which students had to reflect the emotional impact the declaration of World War I had on New Zealand families through an original musical score.[16]

In the same year it ran a joint competition with ABC Classic FM and the Australian Department for Veterans' Affairs - Gallipoli Songs - for original compositions that best reflected the experiences of the original ANZAC troops and their families. Australian soprano Merlyn Quaife, Australian composer Elliott Gyger, ABC host Stephen Adams, RNZ host Kate Mead and New Zealand composer Dame Gillian Whitehead judged the competition - and New Zealand composer Andrew Baldwin was one of the six winners. The compositions were performed, recorded and broadcast on the Concert programme and Classic programme on Anzac Day 2015.[17][18][19][20]

Funding

RNZ is fully funded by the government through New Zealand on Air, but its funding has been nominally frozen since the election of the fifth National government in 2008. During his time as broadcasting minister in 2008 to 2011, National MP Johnathon Coleman asked the organisation to consider alternative revenue sources, including listener donations and commercial sponsorship of RNZ Concert programmes, to help cover the network's operating costs. Commercial sponsorship has been criticised by opposition MPs and activism group Save RNZ, was rejected by former chief executive Peter Cavanagh, and continues to be resisted by current chief executive Paul Thompson.[21][22][23][24][25]

The Concert programme has drawn criticism for its Government funding. It has faced allegations of elitism, left-wing bias, and serving wealthy audiences and minority interests.[26][27] Equally, it has been accused of closely following commercial radio formats and failing to perform as a public broadcaster without commercial constraints.[28] Supporters of the network have said it performs well on a small budget.[29] In response, David Farrar has called for the station to be scrapped, saying it "plays basically German classical music" when "almost every piece of classical music in history is available for free and can be streamed, made into playlists and the like".[30]

Live performances

New Zealand Symphony Orchestra

Several New Zealand Symphony Orchestra performances of Gareth Farr compositions have been broadcast on RNZ Concert.

Recorded performances of the New Zealand Symphony Orchestra have been one of the cornerstones of the Concert programme since the orchestra was first formed. The orchestra began as a department of the New Zealand Broadcasting Corporation, which later became Radio New Zealand, in 1946.[31][32] Despite the formal separation, Symphony Orchestra performances continue to be recorded, broadcast and archived by RNZ Concert. Auckland Town Hall, Wellington Town Hall and Michael Fowler Centre performances are broadcast live-to-air and streamed online, and performances in other centres or overseas cities are usually recorded and broadcast at a later date.[33] On many occasions the pieces are from prominent composers, like Gustav Mahler, Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky, Ludwig van Beethoven, Sergei Prokofiev or Felix Mendelssohn-Bartholdy. On other occasions, they are the work of local composers like Gareth Farr, James MacMillan or Chris Watson.[34]

Young composers

Each year, young composers studying musical composition at university are also given the opportunity to have their work performed by the Symphony Orchestra and broadcast on the Concert programme. The NZSO Todd Corporation Young Composers Award provides nine finalists with firsthand mentoring on orchestral composition and the chance to have their composition workshopped, rehearsed and performed by the full-size, professional orchestra. Each finalist is interviewed for a Concert feature programme, with a judging panel deciding the award winner.

University of Otago student Sam van Betew won the competition in 2014, and said it was an honour to have "one of the world's best orchestras" performing his music.[35] University of Auckland and New Zealand School of Music graduate Robin Toan was a finalist in 2008, and described it as one of the most valuable experiences a young composer can have.[36]

In 2005, Robin Toan was also the first young composer to be selected as composer-in-residence for the National Youth Orchestra - one of two Symphony Orchestra subsidiaries whose performances have been recorded for the Concert programme. Performances of the NZSO Chamber Orchestra were also recorded and broadcast by the Concert programme over the 13 years they performed.[37]

Other groups

Chamber Music New Zealand, Wellington Chamber Orchestra and Christchurch Symphony Orchestra regularly perform for broadcasts and podcasts, and around five Auckland Philharmonic Orchestra performances are recorded every year.[38][39] New Zealand String Quartet concerts have featured on RNZ Concert, as well as being broadcast by Deutsche Welle, CBC Radio 2 and ABC Classic FM.[40][41]

Performances by church and private school choirs are often featured, including those of Wellington's Cathedral of St Paul and Christchurch's St Andrews School.[42][43] Auckland's Musica Sacra chamber choir has had several concerts recorded since 1998, and Wellington's Nota Bene chamber choir has had its concerts regularly recorded since 2004.[44][45] Winners of the Royal Overseas League Arts International Scholarship for a New Zealand Chamber Ensemble also have their performances recorded for broadcast.[46]

Recorded music

Local artists

Featured New Zealand pianist Read Gainsford is based at Florida State University.

Over several decades the Concert Programme has recorded and broadcast many New Zealand compositions, and featured many local musicians. Its collected recordings, currently held by Ngā Taonga Sound and Vision national archives, have become a record of New Zealand's fine music history.[47] Some of the only remaining audio recordings of composer Douglas Lilburn are two interviews with the Concert programme and a recorded performance of him playing his own piece From the Port Hills.[48]

Many New Zealand musicians and composers, like London-based Kiri te Kanawa and Florida State University's Reed Gainsford, have had their work recorded and broadcast by Concert while pursuing further musical study and career opportunities abroad in the United States, United Kingdom or Europe.[49][50] Other artists have remained based in New Zealand, while having their work showcased by Concert and by fine music stations overseas. These include pianist and chamber soloist Katherine Austin, singer Judy Bellingham and organist Michael Stewart.[51][52][53][54]

Composers and composing musicians like Michael Williams, Phillip Brownlee, Yvette Audain, Nigel Keay and Ryan Youens have had their work featured on Concert and several conductors, like Martin Setchell, have been involved in recordings.[55][56][57][58][59][60] Singers Morag Atchison, Stephanie Acraman and Valerie Wycoff, violinists Amalia Hall and Natalie Sharonlin and pianists Charmaine Ford and Rachel Thomas have also performed their work.[61][62][63][64][65][66][67]

International artists

Many international artists have had their work recorded for broadcast in New Zealand and other countries. For example, Bulgarian pianist Hristo Kazakov has been featured on Concert and other radio stations in Australia, Brazil, South Africa, Peru, Taiwan, Estonia, Switzerland, Italy, Spain, Israel and Turkey.[68]

Canadian barotone David Pike and Australian violinist Robin Willson have both received international exposure on the Concert network, while also being played by their own local fine music stations.[69][70] The compositions of Britain's John Gardner have been performed for Concert,[71] and University of Hull music lecturer and clarinetist Rob MacKay has performed his music for the network.[72]

Programmes

The station has live continuity presentation between 6am and midnight, and automated music overnight. Four full-time continuity presenters - Rick Young, David Morriss, Christine Argyle and Clarissa Dunn - present most of the network's programmes. Casual presenters, contributors, writers and producers include former BBC Radio 3 presenter and music journalist Charlotte Wilson,[73] music administrators Julie Sperring and Roger Lloyd,[74][75] and composers James Gardner and Celeste Oram.[76][77]

Weekday programmes

RNZ Concert regularly broadcasts ABC Classic FM concert recordings on Wednesday nights.
  • Classic Morning is a breakfast programme, hosted by Rick Young from 6.00am. The programme includes about fifteen pieces over three hours and a weekly competition at 7.30.[78] The daily Live Diary events guide is broadcast every morning at 8.10, featuring listings of fine music events and lunchtime concerts.[79] Composer of the Week airs from 9am, with experts like New Zealand School of Music jazz lecturer Norman Meehan presenting an introduction to the work of particular composers.[80] For ten weeks of the year, specialist programmes on particular topics or scenes run in the show's place - one special in December 2011 focusing on the history of the ukelele.[81]
  • Classic Days is a daytime programme, presented by Clarissa Dunn or Cynthia Morahan from 10.00am. The show includes commissions, a selection of pieces from different time periods and styles known as The Works, an hour of Recent Releases and an hour of Afternoon Requests.[82]
  • Upbeat is a music and arts current programme, hosted by Eva Radich from 2.00pm. It is the flagship programme of RNZ Concert programme and previously broadcast from 12.00pm to 1.30pm. The show covers developments in a wide variety of music genres, and interviews and musical selections of various musicians, composers, choreographers, dancers, actors, directors, artists and other creators and specialists. Hundreds of local and international arts guests have appeared on the programme, ranging from artist Roger Boyce and dancer Alexa Wilson, through to pianist Jason Bae and composer Paul Lewis.[83][84][85][86] Regular guests have included music critic Peter Mechen, musicologist Peter Walls, concert reviewer Samuel Holloway, dance critic Deidre Tarrant, writer Graham Reid and music reviewer Robert Johnson.[87][88][89][90][91][92][93] World music reviewer Shelly Brunt and music theorist Keith Chapin are former contributors.[94][95]
  • Classic Drive is a drivetime programme, hosted by David Morriss from 3.00pm. The show includes classic performances from the back catalogues in CD Masters at 3pm, and an hour of New Zealand performers and composers in Made in New Zealand at 4pm.[96] Up to fifteen short well-known classic pieces such as opera arias and choruses are broadcast during Cadenza from 5pm. It also includes a weekly competition Monday to Thursday at 5.30pm and a themed segment at around 6pm.[97]
  • Weeknights is an evening programme,hosted by various hosts from 7.00pm to 12.00am on Mondays to Thursdays. The show begins with a repeat of Composer of the Week or Critic's Chair, a long-form interview, a music special or a documentary series. Often the theme is a prominent New Zealander like Carmen Rupe, or a topic like the influence of German musical traditions on New Zealand.[98][99][100][101] A live concert is broadcast every evening from 8pm - often a lecture-concert or special event on Mondays, a classical concert airs on Tuesdays, an overseas concert on Wednesdays, and an Auckland Philharmonia Orchestra concert on Thursdays.[102] The evening ends with two hours of easy listening music.[96]
  • The Sound Lounge is a five-hour programme of contemporary music, hosted by Kate Mead from 7.00pm to 12.00am on Fridays. The show features music from the 20th and 21st centuries with music ranging from classical to jazz and avant-garde to popular music. The show usually includes a live concert at 8pm, a feature programme and a final section of uninterrupted music. It previously aired on Tuesday nights.[103] Mead also serves as Concert's production manager, having previously worked for BBC Radio 3 and Classic FM UK.[104]

Weekends

Jazz at Lincoln Center is often broadcast on Saturdays.
  • Saturday mornings include fifteen mainstream fine music tracks from 6.00am, highlights from the Upbeat interviews of the previous week at 9.00am and two hours of requests from 10.00am.[96]
  • Saturday afternoons includes RNZ Concert Classical Chart at 12.00pm with the week's top ten best-selling classic musical discs, and The Art of Jazz with Phil Broadhurst, Jazz at Lincoln Center or another jazz programme airs from 1.00pm. World music programme Global Sounds is scheduled at 2.00pm, and a matinee repeat of a live performance airs at 3.00pm, followed by New Zealand music.[96]
  • Saturday evenings includes vocal music, a New Zealand Symphony Orchestra concert, and easy-listening music.[96]
  • Sunday mornings include spiritual music programme Sanctuary, Hymns for Sunday morning, shorter track show Grace Notes and compilation show The Works. Hymns became part of the Sunday morning line-up in 2012, after it was removed from Radio New Zealand National as part of changes changes to the network.[105]
  • Sunday afternoons includes The Critic's Chair at 12.00, with a range of reviewers like Robert Johnson presenting their view of new classical releases.[106] Other shows include selection programme The Vintage Years and the Sunday Feature slot, featuring a rotation of music documentaries on topics like the staging of opera and the Brilliant Brass series on jazz, orchestral, solo and band music.[107][108] The network features fine music events like high school choir festivals on Sunday late afternoons, in a timeslot previously dedicated to opera.[109]
  • New Horizons, a rock, popular, country and folk music show, is hosted by William Dart from 5.00pm to 6.00pm. The show aired on Sunday nights from April 1980, but was moved to the early evening in 2015.[96] Dart was given the opportunity to design the cover of an issue of the New Zealand Listener to celebrate the launch of the show, and chose Ry Cooder, XTC, The Kinks, Sparks, Randy Newman, Lou Reed, Joni Mitchell, Elvis Costello and Jonathan Richman.[110] Sometimes New Horizons is replaced by documentaries on the history of pop music, like the 2011 Chris Bourke series Blue Smoke, which documents the history of pop music before the days of rock'n'roll.[111]
  • Sunday evenings including Opera on Sunday, usually from the Metropolitan Opera, followed by easy listening music.

Broadcasting

RNZ Concert uses the Radio Data System in its FM signal, broadcasts in mono on FM, and is available online in stereo.[112]

Stations

Other broadcasting methods

These are the community-owned frequencies and other broadcasting methods of RNZ National:

References

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  28. Reid, D. M. (2014). Solid to liquid culture: The institutional, political and economic transformation of New Zealand state broadcasting (Doctoral dissertation, University of Otago).
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  47. Palmer, J. (1999). Twenty-five years on: The archive of New Zealand music and the Alexander Turnbull Library. Fontes artis musicae, 35-41.
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External links