Originally posted by mangerton
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Prom 74: Saturday 10th September at 7.30 p.m. (Last Night of the Proms)
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Originally posted by Bert Coules View PostI've now listened to the 1969 Last Night LP, and my memory wasn't far out: the overall impression is of considerably more controlled, more musical, audience participation than in later years.
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The whole thing feels at once more relaxed and more disciplined than of late. And considerably more fun.
I was listening to a CD of a couple of combined Viennese nights a while back (early 70s) and relaxed fun is a good description of those too. Perhaps we've lost the art...
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Originally posted by Roslynmuse View PostThanks for the report! - a very nice evocation.
Is that the LP with a sort of mauve-shaded cover?
I seem to recall another rather similar Last Night LP, also under Davis - perhaps the following year? But I don't own that one.Last edited by Bert Coules; 12-09-11, 15:34.
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Originally posted by Bert Coules View PostThen, in authentic Henry Wood fashion, it turns into a race: Davis and the BBC SO win by a very short beat...
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Yes, and I recall a later newly-commissioned Last Night piece which included the Hornpipe and did even more fiendish audience-throwing things with the rhythms. I can't remember the composer, though.
Here's the later LP:
It's the 1972 Last Night. Ah, nostalgia: I can see a goodly number of my Prom-going friends in that photo, including a soon-to-be prominent BBC producer, and my wife-to-be...Last edited by Bert Coules; 12-09-11, 15:43.
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Originally posted by Bert Coules View PostYes, and I recall a later newly-commissioned Last Night piece which included the Hornpipe and did even more fiendish audience-throwing things with the rhythms. I can't remember the composer, though.
"In the following year, Glock and Davis made their first effort at reform, by deleting ‘Land of Hope and Glory’ from the ‘Last Night’ programme; but so great was the press and public outcry that in the end it had to be re-instated. In 1970, the controller and conductor attempted an alternative modification: Malcolm Arnold was commissioned to write a modern equivalent of Wood's ‘Sea Songs’, which included audience participation and the traditional hornpipe, but in 5/8 time, demanding an exceptional rhythmic facility in the stamping from the audience; but, perhaps for this reason, it did not catch on. Twelve months later, there was another new commission in the form of Malcolm Williamson's ‘instant opera’ entitled ‘The Stone Wall’; but it, too, was not a success. And in 1972 there was yet a third attempt to produce a modern substitute for the ‘Sea Songs’ in the form of a work entitled ‘Celebration’, by Gordon Crosse; yet this, also, failed to resonate with the audience in the Albert Hall or with the public beyond."
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Yes, it certainly does help, thanks. It was the Arnold that I was remembering, clearly. And I was there in 1971 - very nearly at the Arena rail, in fact - for Williamson's The Stone Wall. "Northern Savages! Southern Savages!"...
LATER...
I've just read the whole of that piece. Fascinating stuff.Last edited by Bert Coules; 12-09-11, 15:57.
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Oh dear I can see myself with hair on the 1969 cover. My sister thought I had lost my teeth.
I am hidden behind Colin's left elbow on the 1972 cover but can see lots of old friends from the BBC Staff Operatic Society (Ariel Opera).
The Stonewall was conducted by Colin Davis with help from the composer Malcolm Williamson and Richard (Dicky) Baker the newsreader and presenter of the Proms.
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Originally posted by Chris Newman View PostOh dear I can see myself with hair on the 1969 cover. My sister thought I had lost my teeth.
I am hidden behind Colin's left elbow on the 1972 cover but can see lots of old friends from the BBC Staff Operatic Society (Ariel Opera).
The Stonewall was conducted by Colin Davis with help from the composer Malcolm Williamson and Richard (Dicky) Baker the newsreader and presenter of the Proms."The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
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Alf-Prufrock
Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostTwelve months later, there was another new commission in the form of Malcolm Williamson's ‘instant opera’ entitled ‘The Stone Wall’; but it, too, was not a success.
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BudgieJane
Why did the BBC move the placing of the chaplet round Sir Henry Wood's bust from the end of the interval/start of the second half, to somewhere in the middle of the first half?
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David Underdown
They are still, in full," The [nth] Season of the Sir Henry Wood Promenade Concerts, presented by the BBC" as you will find written inside the programme for every prom
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