Originally posted by cavatina
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Prom 40: Saturday 13th August 2011 at 7.30 p.m. (Comedy Prom)
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I'm looking forward to making my own mind up when this is shown on TV. I think it sounds like a hugely entertaining evening, and The Arts Desk reviewer certainly seems to have enjoyed it:-
The Arts Desk’s team of professional critics offer unrivalled review coverage, in-depth interviews and features on popular music, classical, art, theatre, comedy, opera, comedy and dance. Dedicated art form pages, readers’ comments, What’s On and our user-friendly theatre and film recommendations
We need all the laughs we can get at the moment, and if this Prom provided some, how on earth can that be a bad thing? Heaven forfend that Classical Music should ever be FUN! The very idea.....
Adn I'll bet it provided a lot more humour than the kindergarten antics of the Last Night Prommers which we're forced to endure every September.Patriotism is supporting your country all the time, and your government when it deserves it.
Mark Twain.
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Originally posted by cavatina View PostOoh, look--they're playing your song...
Song of Patriotic Prejudice(The English are Best)AT THE DROP OF ANOTHER HATon Broadway 1967By Permission of THE FLANDERS & SWANN ESTATES
Now THAT's funny.
And for what it's worth, it's not that I'm po-faced about everything: I certainly don't have a problem with raunchy humour as long as it's witty and clever. In fact, I've seen Tape-Faced Boy's "half-dress" act done much better as a neo-burlesque/performance art cabaret act in New York City: a Fay Wray/King Kong striptease to the tune of "Love is a Many-Splendored Thing". Tacky as all get-out, but that's part of the point.
Here's an article about the neo-burlesque performance art renaissance in New York. I suppose I prefer this kind of humour to much of what was on Radio 3 last night because although it's often crude and over-the-top, it's basically good-natured and seldom mean-spirited. Oh well, to each his own. And never in a million years would I say this kind of thing is appropriate for the Proms or Radio 3...that's my take on it, at any rate.
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Originally posted by Mr Pee View PostHeaven forfend that Classical Music should ever be FUN! The very idea.....It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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I do like comic songs, provided that they are well thought-out, perceptive and funny. Flanders and Swann ticked all those boxes. For a modern successor, listen to this:
Last edited by Eine Alpensinfonie; 14-08-11, 13:40.
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cavatina
We need all the laughs we can get at the moment, and if this Prom provided some, how on earth can that be a bad thing? Heaven forfend that Classical Music should ever be FUN! The very idea.....
But hey, if you prefer your humour sour, jaded, and rotten, more power to you. Maybe I've spent too much time trying to fight off feeling nihilistic and depressed to find it uplifting. Black humor can be a very savage and destructive way to show searing contempt for everyone and everything-- like Baudelaire put it, "the man who laughs, but smiles no more". I don't want to encourage that in myself, so try to avoid the kind of humour that feeds it.
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BudgieJane
Originally posted by Mr Pee View PostWe need all the laughs we can get at the moment, and if this Prom provided some, how on earth can that be a bad thing? Heaven forfend that Classical Music should ever be FUN! The very idea.....
Originally posted by Mr Pee View PostAnd I'll bet it provided a lot more humour than the kindergarten antics of the Last Night Prommers which we're forced to endure every September.
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Originally posted by french frank View PostI suppose what can grate is people who know nothing about classical music laughing at it
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You're not forced to endure the Last Night of the Proms: you don't have to attend at the hall or in one of the parks, you don't have to listen to it on the radio, and you don't have to watch it on TV.Patriotism is supporting your country all the time, and your government when it deserves it.
Mark Twain.
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BudgieJane
Originally posted by Mr Pee View Postbut the klaxons, hankerchiefs, and general faffing about make that impossible.
The sort of thing that we do is bobbing up and down or swaying from side to side in time with the music. Some of us might wave a flag occasionally, and some may wear formal attire or fancy dress. We set off party poppers and toss balloons around; after all, it is the end-of-season party. I have known people rotate a football rattle during applause. At the interval some of us decorate the conductor's podium. This hasn't changed much since the first Last Night I attended, in 1970, and it was traditional then, so it is just the continuation of a well-established tradition.
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Indeed, Sir Malcolm Sargent actually encouraged some childishness and Colin Davis sat quite heavily on those who went OTT. Some conductors of last nights refused to do it again because of the bad behaviour: Vernon Handley, Raymond Leppard and Sir Charles Mackerras, all much loved by the real Promenaders, only put up with it the once in the 1970s.
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Originally posted by Jane Sullivan View PostPlease don't tar everyone with the same brush. I think you'll find that the klaxons belong to a class of person that does not go to the proms regularly and only goes to the last night. None of the regular promenaders uses a klaxon; it's antisocial.
The sort of thing that we do is bobbing up and down or swaying from side to side in time with the music.
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BudgieJane
Originally posted by Mary Chambers View PostOr more usually, from what I've observed on television, not in time to the music. (I'm sure that doesn't apply to anyone who posts here )
<aside>
Gordon Bennett, these smilies are awful! Who drinks shampoo from a saucer these days?
</aside>
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