Interesting piece by the critic Philip Clark in a Prospect Culture newsletter. Clark raved about the Braxton concert: "Despite the main man’s unavoidable absence, I felt cheered that, at last, the BBC had grasped a fundamental truth about how such music operates."
Clark has no problem with the expansion of the Proms beyond classical music but was dismissive of recent concerts which 'have not been given the thought they deserve'. Tribute jazz and rock concerts with 'classicised' orchestral accompaniments rather than engaging with (non-commercial i.e. NOT Sam Smith) modern composers and performers. "A well-meaning tribute to David Bowie, a few months after his death in 2016, was widely ridiculed for fussy post-minimalist orchestrations that soft-pedalled the spirit of dark voodoo that haunts albums such as Outside and Blackstar. This year, a concert focused on Nick Drake suffered similarly—it sounded all the notes but missed the music by a mile [...]. [So] commission new work from composers such as William Parker, Roscoe Mitchell and Tyshawn Sorey, who open up spaces between composition and improvisation—and can be present to make a case for their work."
He makes a cogent point about the BBC not engaging pop stars who can hire - and fill - the RAH out of their own pocket rather than spending scarce resources to pay them to perform. The BBC has its reasons which reason knows not.
Clark has no problem with the expansion of the Proms beyond classical music but was dismissive of recent concerts which 'have not been given the thought they deserve'. Tribute jazz and rock concerts with 'classicised' orchestral accompaniments rather than engaging with (non-commercial i.e. NOT Sam Smith) modern composers and performers. "A well-meaning tribute to David Bowie, a few months after his death in 2016, was widely ridiculed for fussy post-minimalist orchestrations that soft-pedalled the spirit of dark voodoo that haunts albums such as Outside and Blackstar. This year, a concert focused on Nick Drake suffered similarly—it sounded all the notes but missed the music by a mile [...]. [So] commission new work from composers such as William Parker, Roscoe Mitchell and Tyshawn Sorey, who open up spaces between composition and improvisation—and can be present to make a case for their work."
He makes a cogent point about the BBC not engaging pop stars who can hire - and fill - the RAH out of their own pocket rather than spending scarce resources to pay them to perform. The BBC has its reasons which reason knows not.
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