Why oh why does the BBC think it’s good to have “plinky-plonks “music playing throughout their programmes especially the nature and travel ones ,sometimes so loud it’s hard to hear the speech.
I am often reduced to muting the sound and rely on subtitles but then you miss the nuances of dialogue.
You're hardly the first to moan about background music on TV programmes here, Megfitz. Some of those who've done so in the past have benefited from following advice to go into their TV's 'Settings' menu and ajust the sound mode. Even my ultra-cheapo Polaroid set from Asda offers 'Standard', 'Music', 'Theater' and 'User' options (with the last one enabling...
You're hardly the first to moan about background music on TV programmes here, Megfitz. Some of those who've done so in the past have benefited from following advice to go into their TV's 'Settings' menu and ajust the sound mode. Even my ultra-cheapo Polaroid set from Asda offers 'Standard', 'Music', 'Theater' and 'User' options (with the last one enabling me to choose my own treble and bass values).
I never notice incidental music on tv, unless it’s on things like Homes Under the Hammer where they have cringingly obvious accompaniments. Things like ‘There’s a rat in the kitchen’, when there is an actual rat in the kitchen.
(I don’t watch it. Husband does, and it spills out of his headphones.)
There is an expression for this in broadcasting, can't remember what it is. They play background noise/music so if somebody stops talking there isn't a silent gap.
Nor mine, hc, that's schools TV music from the '70s.
What we're discussing, I think, is the plucked strings kinda thing which precedes the deep tragedy bass notes and triumpal soaring piano when whatever saddo they're covering wins through.
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