The Daily Telegraph

Radio 3 attacks rival station over ‘populist’ jibe

- By Hannah Furness ARTS CORRESPOND­ENT

Radio 3 has attacked its rival Classic FM, accusing the commercial station of being “put together by a computer programme”. BBC chiefs have compiled a dossier, due out next month, rejecting complaints that Radio 3 has “dumbed down”, after Classic FM accused the BBC of “apeing” its populist style.

IT HAS spent years being accused of dumbing down, as a long-running rivalry with Classic FM left it facing questions about playing film scores, shorter tracks and allowing presenters to talk too much.

But Radio 3 is preparing to come out fighting, it appears, as it compiles a dossier of evidence in an effort to refute complaints it calls “perplexing”.

In it, station staff attack Classic FM, saying it is “put together by a computer programme”.

BBC chiefs have been told to prove there is an “ocean” of difference between the stations, after Classic FM accused it of “apeing” its populist style.

Radio 3 is due next month to submit an official response to the BBC Trust on its “distinctiv­eness”, and is already marshallin­g a step-by-step guide to prove it is not going downmarket.

Papers seen by The Daily Telegraph show thinly veiled jibes at Classic FM, saying claims of ownership of features such as CD of the week and listener polls cannot be “properly described as ‘special pioneering programmin­g’”.

They also note: “Unlike Classic FM, Radio 3 Breakfast is not put together by a computer programme.”

Staff are stern on other accusation­s: film scores have been played for years, they say, and speaking in between CD recordings is “hardly a new or pioneering programme format”. “RadioCentr­e [which represents commercial stations] marshals its arguments against Radio 3 perplexing­ly,” the document states.

The formal submission has not yet been compiled, with staff reporting their findings to Alan Davey, the station controller, who will approve the final trust document. Since his arrival a year ago, Mr Davey has cancelled phone-ins and a classical music chart, to counter claims that Radio 3 had strayed too close to its commercial rival.

Sam Jackson, managing editor of Classic FM, said the changes amounted to “tinkering around the very edges of the schedule” and called on Mr Davey to create “clear blue water” between the two stations.

“I don’t think licence-fee payers are well served by duplicatio­n,” he said.

A source at the BBC said: “The facts suggest there is not just clear blue water between the stations, but a gap of Pacific proportion­s.”

Mr Jackson said: “The music we play is carefully curated by a team of classical music experts. Everything we include on-air is informed and driven by a large amount of listener research.

“Of course, like every other radio station, we use technology but the suggestion that the music we play is not carefully considered and chosen by producers is wrong.”

‘There is not just clear blue water between the stations, but a gap of Pacific proportion­s’

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom