Originally posted by Petrushka
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Proms 2024
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Originally posted by gurnemanz View PostWe only went to one pre-Prom talk. We might have gone to more but it clashed with joining the Arena queue under the old system.
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Originally posted by alywin View PostBut the whole point of the old system was that you got a raffle ticket to mark your place in the queue, then went off to the pre-Prom talk, and came back and rejoined the queue. Or am I missing something?
I could bore for England on this, but: Up to and including the 1992 season, queuing was organised by the Prommers themselves. The rules were attached to the lamppost at the top of the steps, and there was a list that one signed on arrival in the queue. In 1993 the Hall intervened, abolished the old system, banned lists, and began to experiment with different queuing systems. They began issuing raffle tickets, in the afternoon, to allow those queuing to leave their places to go to the talk and then re-join the queue.
Much has changed since then. About (someone please correct me) eight years ago there was a rash of ram-raiding attacks on crowds of people. The Hall management panicked, and began issuing raffle tickets at 9:00am, allowing people to leave the queue all day if they wished. About (someone please correct me) five years ago, halfway through the season, the Stewards began issuing two raffle tickets per person, a system that still rankles with those who queue for themselves alone and which the Hall management have never made any attempt to justify. Letters to the Hall complaining about this about this are met with a bland "we review the queuing arrangements every year" response.
Oh, I can't go on. RAH management are beneath contempt. It's not as though we pay their salaries, is it?
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Originally posted by PhilipT View Post
No, you are not. That was, originally [see below] the only point of raffle tickets.
I could bore for England on this, but: Up to and including the 1992 season, queuing was organised by the Prommers themselves. The rules were attached to the lamppost at the top of the steps, and there was a list that one signed on arrival in the queue. In 1993 the Hall intervened, abolished the old system, banned lists, and began to experiment with different queuing systems. They began issuing raffle tickets, in the afternoon, to allow those queuing to leave their places to go to the talk and then re-join the queue.
Much has changed since then. About (someone please correct me) eight years ago there was a rash of ram-raiding attacks on crowds of people. The Hall management panicked, and began issuing raffle tickets at 9:00am, allowing people to leave the queue all day if they wished. About (someone please correct me) five years ago, halfway through the season, the Stewards began issuing two raffle tickets per person, a system that still rankles with those who queue for themselves alone and which the Hall management have never made any attempt to justify. Letters to the Hall complaining about this about this are met with a bland "we review the queuing arrangements every year" response.
Oh, I can't go on. RAH management are beneath contempt. It's not as though we pay their salaries, is it?
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On another tack, as it were, it may be early to sum up this year's season, but one thing that has occurred to me is that the commemoration of the Bruckner and Schoenberg anniversaries has been rather meagre. I think it's the urge to include so many 'non-classical ' concerts that has restricted this, and that the Proms no longer deserve the BBc's boast about the 'greatest classical music festival'.
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Originally posted by smittims View PostOn another tack, as it were, it may be early to sum up this year's season, but one thing that has occurred to me is that the commemoration of the Bruckner and Schoenberg anniversaries has been rather meagre. I think it's the urge to include so many 'non-classical ' concerts that has restricted this, and that the Proms no longer deserve the BBc's boast about the 'greatest classical music festival'.
Is his music still considered box office poison?"The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
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Yep - Radio 2 / Classic FM style-progs have shoved an awful lot of R3 classical repertoire aside. Made a number of concerts unlistenable for me. That and daily increase of jazz has re-shaped R3. Hence my use of the Finnish classic music site Yle Klassinen | Yle Areena. while watching cricket / football on Sky.
Ahem.......................
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Originally posted by smittims View PostOn another tack, as it were, it may be early to sum up this year's season, but one thing that has occurred to me is that the commemoration of the Bruckner and Schoenberg anniversaries has been rather meagre. I think it's the urge to include so many 'non-classical ' concerts that has restricted this, and that the Proms no longer deserve the BBc's boast about the 'greatest classical music festival'.
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Originally posted by Petrushka View Post
The Schoenberg anniversary seems to have passed by largely unnoticed, not just at the Proms, much as I'd feared.
Is his music still considered box office poison?
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Originally posted by Darkbloom View Post
The Proms is the ideal place to do something you wouldn't hear anywhere else and a Bruckner cycle would have been welcome, along with an intelligent selection of Schoenberg."The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
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Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View PostI’m not sure about the “ram-raiding” phrase . That’s all about burglary. Do you mean terrorist attacks on crowds using cars ? That’s some thing completely different. Once you decide public queuing is unsafe it’s very difficult to devise a system that isn’t open to some form of gaming. It always struck me that the old queuing system was great for those with spare time but not so good with those with a job.
And I agree about the Bruckner and Schoenberg anniversaries. I'd barely registered the Bruckner one, and the Schoenberg not at all :(
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https://www.theguardian.com/music/article/2024/sep/10/tell-us-your-highlights-from-this-proms-seasonAs the Proms’ eight-week season comes to a close, we’d like to hear about your highlights
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