Originally posted by pastoralguy
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Moving seats at concerts...
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Originally posted by PhilipT View PostEh? The RAH does not have a Royal Box (this is a favourite trick question among Promenaders), but it does have a Queen's Box, a double box on the Grand Tier level. RAH boxes are held on leaseholds, and Queen Victoria bought this double box when the Hall was built. Usually, if the Royal Family don't want the use of the box for a particular concert, and usually they don't, then the seats are made available via a ballot to members of the Royal Household - it's a perk of working in the Royal Household. It's very rare for the Queen's Box to be empty at a sold-out Prom; the only occasion I remember was in 1997 on the evening of the funeral of Diana, Princess of Wales. The box was empty, and in darkness.
I'm not making it up...
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Originally posted by Petrushka View PostI go down into the Arena for part 1, casually look around for an empty stalls seat, then home in on it for part two after the interval looking as if I own the place.
... My guess is that people come down from the gallery having trained their binoculars on picking out likely seats below.
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Originally posted by Flosshilde View PostDoesn't this distract you from the music?"The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
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Originally posted by PhilipT View PostEh? The RAH does not have a Royal Box (this is a favourite trick question among Promenaders), but it does have a Queen's Box, a double box on the Grand Tier level. RAH boxes are held on leaseholds, and Queen Victoria bought this double box when the Hall was built. Usually, if the Royal Family don't want the use of the box for a particular concert, and usually they don't, then the seats are made available via a ballot to members of the Royal Household - it's a perk of working in the Royal Household. It's very rare for the Queen's Box to be empty at a sold-out Prom; the only occasion I remember was in 1997 on the evening of the funeral of Diana, Princess of Wales. The box was empty, and in darkness.
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I once sat in the Venetian equivelant of the Royal Box in La Fenice - twice the height of the other boxes, lined with mirrors framed by gilt palm trees.
(It had some other people in it, & I just wandered in by accident)
(It was for a free concert, when the orchestra was occupying the theatre for some reason)
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Before they refurbished the RFH the only toilets on level 6 (I think it's that one ?) with disabled access were in the Royal Box. Having done several performances around there with groups of people including wheelchair users we got quite familiar. The temptation to leave a copy of the Beano in the loo
The RAH has some rather swanky "Royal Retiring Rooms" that are sometimes used for meetings etc
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Thirty years ago the BBC didn't make much effort to sell tickets for BBC Phil concerts, with the result that the Free Trade Hall would be only one eighth full, and people used to migrate to better seats between works (or even between movements) and loll around with their feet over the back of the seat in front and their jackets and other paraphernalia spread out over several adjacent seats.
I recently went to hear Olivier Latry at Ripon Cathedral and moved into the cheaper seats after the interval because I suspected the acoustics were better there. I was right.
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Originally posted by Vile Consort View Postpeople used to migrate to better seats between works (or even between movements) and loll around with their feet over the back of the seat in front and their jackets and other paraphernalia spread out over several adjacent seats.
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Originally posted by Beef Oven! View PostSounds like my experience at Gong concerts, nearly 40 years ago. Shocking.I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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amateur51
Huge seat-swapping potential at Royal Festival Hall in London tonight
Daniil Trifonov, an award-winning young Russian pianist, is making his RFH debut andf there are hundreds of empty seatss., particularl;y in the balcony where you can pick up a seat for £10 and then swan down
Programme includes JS Bach, Beethoven piano sonata op. 111 and Liszt Transcendental studies.
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