Jarvis Cocker yesterday cautioned the Save BBC 6Music brigade about getting too excited about the news 6music might get a stay of execution courtesy of the BBC Trust, saying the digital station could do without a sustained period of insecurity. Yesterday news emerged that the BBC Trust will tell management at the Corporation that they can't shut down the digital music station - as they have proposed - but must instead undertake another consultation to assess the value of the service. The Brit pop frontman Jarvis worries that although this will save the station in the short term, it will extend the period of insecurity for the people who work there, because the Trust instigated consultation could still result in the service being ultimately closed. Pulp man and 6music presenter Jarvis was speaking at the Annual General Meeting of the Association Of Independent Music in London yesterday. According to Billboard, he joked that "I only started working there in January and then it was about three weeks later they decided to close it down - I did try not to take that personally". He continued: "They (the Trust) may try to stall and say we need longer to think this over. But they should stick with the [original] timetable [and make a final decision]. It would be unfair on staff at the station to have to continue working under such uncertainty. And it would be a slightly dirty trick if they tried to prolong (the process) and hope everyone forgets about it, (so they can quietly shut it down in eighteen months time)". He told the AIM event that "it really is the only place a lot of bands are going to get played" and that shutting it down "would have a detrimental effect". Strong words for the Beeb
Elsewhere at the AIM AGM, the boss of the trade body, Alison Wenham, also had some strong words for the BBC. In a speech that also took a swipe at Google and the government's plans to turn off the FM radio network in 2015, she was most angry about the Beeb's plans to shut 6Music, saying BBC bosses had provided only "poor excuses" for shutting down their only truly eclectic music service. She also disputed the idea that only younger listeners were interested in music-heavy radio. According to Music Week, she concluded: "I am of a certain age. By rights I should have stopped listening to music by now. I should be drinking Ovaltine. (But I am not). Wake up and listen to people like me". Additional reporting by CMU Network Photo - Livepic
|