Eurovision Chat Over Coffee, BBC R&D’s Dave Marston And Eurovision’s Next Generation Audio

We talk a lot about the songs of the Eurovision Song Contest here, we look at how the Song Contest allows cultures to be shared, and how the Contest is used as a live environment for testing new broadcast technologies. It's the latter that's the subject of today's Chat Over Coffee podcast. Liverpool's hosting of the Eurovision Song Contest was a golden opportunity for the BBC's Research and Development team to use the live environment for one of their many projects. How does an R&D team actually use the Song Contest? Earlier this year, I sat down with Dave Marston from the BBC's Research and Development to talk about one project. The team has been working on Next Generation Audio, which allows more interaction and personalisation of the audio presentation. This involves attaching metadata to as many of the files in the soundscape as possible... something that is easy to do on a pre-recorded show, less so for a live broadcast. Which is where Eurovision comes in. How was the decision to use the Song Contest made, what facilities were needed, and how is the project still making a difference? From immersive audio and standardised formats, through collecting the raw audio in Liverpool, to and having a 'Eurovision Song Contest Simulator' to test new techniques, Liverpool 2023 was a unique moment to test Next Generation Audio techniques. Ewan Spence sits down with BBC R&D's Dave Marston to talk about using the Song Contest as a platform to trial new broadcast techniques.

Om Podcasten

Join Ewan Spence and ESC Insight as they take you on the journey that is the Eurovision Song Contest. From an introduction to the contest and rules, through the songs chosen by each country to backstage at the stadium, this is your unofficial guide to one of the world's favourite television shows, with over 200 million viewers worldwide each year.