Today I’m grateful for web alternatives to radio.
Because the Bay Area’s only classical radio station,
KDFC, is in a fund-raising drive, and they’re reverting to their old,
pre-public radio habits.
When I first arrived here in the Valley they Call
Silicon, KDFC was a commercial station, possibly about the last one in the US
devoted to classical music. Although listening to them for any increment longer
than five minutes made me refer to them as “classics lite”, because they never
played an entire piece. The most you got was a movement from a concerto or a symphony
or a sonata before a commercial came on.
But evidently even that ratio of ads-to-content wasn’t
paying off, because in 2011 the station was sold to the University of Southern
California, which operates KUSC as a classics-format station for LA.
Ergo the pledge breaks.
Well, fair enough.
But since they started their fall fundraiser last week,
they haven’t played more than a movement from a concerto or a symphony or a sonata
before they slam you with four or five minutes of pledge hype.
But they jumped the shark, in my opinion, yesterday, when
they interrupted “The Heavens Are Telling” twice to ask for money.
Honest-to-Bach—how crass can you get?
Well, no—I shouldn’t ask that sort of thing. They’ll show
me soon enough.
Meanwhile, I’ve got Pandora, and my own playlists that
will get me through this drive just fine. So, once again—God bless the
Internet.
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