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TRAINING LISTENERS

BEOADOASTING POLICY mriKi TOi: ei.Anis sixthss "Without people 1 knowing it, their standard of listening lias been raised out of all knowledge," said Professor James Shelley, Director of Broadcasting, in an interview in Christchurch. "We have to train listeners," lie said, “and we are certainly doing it." To illustrate this claim Professor Shelley spoke of an elderly listener who told him he preferred "bright stuff." Later the same man had come to him to express his pleasure al listening to "this fellow Mozart." “You have only to call it something other than ’Opus No. 14 in B minor’ and people will listen," Professor Shelley said. “We have to train listeners. By that f do not mean that we should give them all classical music, but whatever it is we give them it is the standard that matters.”

The quality of New Zealand talent would have to be high also, Prolessor Shelley said. He was in Invercargill last week and told people awaiting a Government station there that local talent would simply have to be good to retain its place on Government programmes. Listeners were the most critical audience in the world, and would compare local talent with the best in the world which they heard through the medium of records. Broadcasting demanded a high standard of talent if listeners were to be satisfied.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/PBH19370714.2.11

Bibliographic details

Poverty Bay Herald, Volume LXIV, Issue 19376, 14 July 1937, Page 3

Word Count
225

TRAINING LISTENERS Poverty Bay Herald, Volume LXIV, Issue 19376, 14 July 1937, Page 3

TRAINING LISTENERS Poverty Bay Herald, Volume LXIV, Issue 19376, 14 July 1937, Page 3