I remember liking much about Olga Korbut, but admiring her leotards wasn't any of it. If anything, they were dowdy.I didn’t call Beyoncé ugly. She is not. Her crazy outfit, worn by Chiles…ahum…
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I remember liking much about Olga Korbut, but admiring her leotards wasn't any of it. If anything, they were dowdy.I didn’t call Beyoncé ugly. She is not. Her crazy outfit, worn by Chiles…ahum…
That was the style then - either white/beige or red. USSR theme. But her light physique - Wow! Totally adorable! Comaneci also lovely in her main Games (76). I appreciated but didn’t ADORE Tourischeva, Kim and other more muscular ones. (Similar feeling for today’s more muscular ones - admire Biles but don’t adore her.) I preferred the reed thin ones. Different preferences for different folks.I remember liking much about Olga Korbut, but admiring her leotards wasn't any of it. If anything, they were dowdy.
A good list. I’d add Peggy Fleming’s music - Samson & Delilah and Traviata. Or Moiseyev folk dances (Julie Lynn Holmes). Or Beethoven’s Fidelio (Janet Lynn).I think this decision will push Figure Skating music even more in the direction of Warhorses than it already is.
I envision this to be the USFSA Approved Music List (since most skaters use this music already, not much of a change):
1. Carmen
2. Rachmaninov's Piano Concerto No.2
3. Rachmaninov's Piano Concerto No. 3
4. Swan Lake
5. The Nutcracker
6. Sleeping Beauty
7. Tchaikovsky's Romeo & Juliet
8. Liebestraume by Franz Liszt
9. Borodin's Polovtsian Dances
10. Blue Danube Waltz
I think this decision will push Figure Skating music even more in the direction of Warhorses than it already is.
I envision this to be the USFSA Approved Music List (since most skaters use this music already, not much of a change):
1. Carmen
2. Rachmaninov's Piano Concerto No.2
3. Rachmaninov's Piano Concerto No. 3
4. Swan Lake
5. The Nutcracker
6. Sleeping Beauty
7. Tchaikovsky's Romeo & Juliet
8. Liebestraume by Franz Liszt
9. Borodin's Polovtsian Dances
10. Blue Danube Waltz
Cut services to fans... it's hard to go below zero!Should they cut services to members? To fans?
I really, really don't understand your thinking. Just because some music is on a USFSA list doesn't mean that it is usable for anything except competitions and the immediate broadcast of them. Maybe--if we're lucky--Peacock on replays. It doesn't matter whether it is classical music or the modern rap--the restrictions are severe.A good list. I’d add Peggy Fleming’s music - Samson & Delilah and Traviata. Or Moiseyev folk dances (Julie Lynn Holmes). Or Beethoven’s Fidelio (Janet Lynn).
Before the internet, I remember mailing LPs or tapes to my favorite skaters! “Try this…” A skater actually tried La Valse and other Debussy tunes that I sent her. And a guy tried Tchaikovsky Violin Concerto that I mailed. Ah, those were the days!
As mentioned upthread, most artists have signed on to a general agreement that covers music played live at events. The music played in the venue at Nats and SA is done by DJ Romeo. Music played between skaters at other qual and non-qual events is handled by the music people (USFS officials) and it's a curated playlist set up in their equipment. It's not the radio.What if somebody was just playing the radio in the venue?
Your DVR will have a hard drive, so yes, whatever you record from a broadcast will retain music as it's a recording of exactly what went to air. It can't be accessed externally to mute music or delete anything.I apologize if this was discussed and I missed it, but can I DVR a skating broadcast to view later, and I presume it would include the music? I set my DISH hopper to record all skating broadcasts during the competitive season, just in case I miss something or want to watch it twice. Competitions last longer in my hopper than it plays on Peacock.
I really, really don't understand your thinking. Just because some music is on a USFSA list doesn't mean that it is usable for anything except competitions and the immediate broadcast of them. Maybe--if we're lucky--Peacock on replays. It doesn't matter whether it is classical music or the modern rap--the restrictions are severe.
FYI This isn't true for everyone anymore. My TV provider has been converting everyone to internet modem and streaming for the past few years. Their newest "tv boxes" do not contain a hard drive and all DVR'd programs are stored on the cloud. (It actually works more like On-Demand programs.)Your DVR will have a hard drive, so yes, whatever you record from a broadcast will retain music as it's a recording of exactly what went to air. It can't be accessed externally to mute music or delete anything.
That's more how I thought it worked. Thanks.FYI This isn't true for everyone anymore. My TV provider has been converting everyone to internet modem and streaming for the past few years. Their newest "tv boxes" do not contain a hard drive and all DVR'd programs are stored on the cloud. (It actually works more like On-Demand programs.)
I just switched over to these tiny 3"x3" boxes. The cloud storage comes with the added benefit of being able to "recover" the programs for a while after I delete them. No idea if the storage is monitored in any way for expired permissions.
No they are not. I’ve been a skating fan (freak! Total love!) since the 1960s and I was driven to it by the classical music (and movement to it)!!!! May CLASS return to figure skating! If you don’t like it, turn on your Fun Radio 101. Enjoy the new breakdancing in the Summer Olympics!
venues and broadcasters also do poorly at handling modern/bass-y music. The outcome is often flat and uninspiring.
I'll take music with vocals over screechy violins (or Maria Butyrskaya's awful scratchy version of Otonal) any day.I generally do not have issue with non-vocal music (i.e. electronic, classical, neo-classical, etc). But most music choices with vocals are distracting and terrible to sit through IMO.
I'll take music with vocals over screechy violins (or Maria Butyrskaya's awful scratchy version of Otonal) any day.
I'd hazard a guess that deleting programs with expired broadcast/on demand licences will be one of the reasons behind that. Program distribution companies usually have it written into contracts with TV/streamers that content will be deleting on expiry of their licence if they don't intend to renew so content being held on people's personal devices is a potential bone of contention,The cloud storage comes with the added benefit of being able to "recover" the programs for a while after I delete them. No idea if the storage is monitored in any way for expired permissions.
And FWIW, Amazon deleted content off of some Kindles when Amazon discovered that it hadn't had the correct rights. In an amazing bit of irony, the deleted book was Orwell's 1984. https://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/18/...e_code=1.300.Bdtn.SYLcuUghP7lO&smid=url-share. (gift link)I'd hazard a guess that deleting programs with expired broadcast/on demand licences will be one of the reasons behind that. Program distribution companies usually have it written into contracts with TV/streamers that content will be deleting on expiry of their licence if they don't intend to renew so content being held on people's personal devices is a potential bone of contention,
My DVR box does have a hard drive, I think (it's not small like Skate Talker describes) but i believe it does store recordings on the cloud. I checked and I still have skating recordings going back to 2019 (I either deleted or copied the earlier recordings to DVD) so perhaps I should try to copy the current recordings I want to keep before they get deleted (wouldn't put that past Comcast). I guess I know what I'm doing over the holiday weekend.I'd hazard a guess that deleting programs with expired broadcast/on demand licences will be one of the reasons behind that. Program distribution companies usually have it written into contracts with TV/streamers that content will be deleting on expiry of their licence if they don't intend to renew so content being held on people's personal devices is a potential bone of contention,
I would think that the fairer cost allocation would be to competition fees, not to all members at large.So I assume if USFS does purchase a streaming license, member dues will go up.