The 2012 Proms season

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  • doversoul1
    Ex Member
    • Dec 2010
    • 7132

    Originally posted by Simon B View Post
    As far as I recall it goes right back to the construction of the hall. To raise funds to build the thing, seats were sold off in perpetuity, or on 1000 year leaseholds or somesuch.

    They're traded by the likes of Harrods Estates. You can deduce for yourself the kind of sums involved from that alone. Doubtless there are several too many zeros on the end for them to ever be of anything but academic interest to me!

    Aha, a cursory search turns up:

    http://www.harrodsestates.com/assets...nformation.pdf
    Seatholders pay an Annual Contribution towards the upkeep of the Hall, which in
    2007 amounts in net terms to £497 per seat.

    (re: http://www.harrodsestates.com/assets...nformation.pdf)

    Does this mean the Proms are not really the ‘world greatest classical music events for people’, then? Or have I been too naïve?

    Comment

    • David Underdown

      The hall is allowed a certain number of "exclusive lets" each year. On these occasions debenture holders normal rights do not apply, and all tickets are sold by the box office. I forget the exact figures (I think there's an explanation in the most recent Proms book, published 2008), there is a particular number of exclusive lets allowed in various different categories - this is apparently one reason why operas during the Proms are often semi-staged: they then don't fall into the concert category for exclusive lets. The proms as a whole is allowed quite a high proportion of the available exclusive lets for each year. The privately owned seats in any case form a very small percentage of the 6000 odd places in the hall

      Comment

      • doversoul1
        Ex Member
        • Dec 2010
        • 7132

        David
        Thank you for explaining the matter. I shall listen to the proms without being bothered by non/un-musical thoughts.

        Comment

        • bluestateprommer
          Full Member
          • Nov 2010
          • 3019

          last 'PromWatch' before The First Night

          Here goes, the last tally of sold-out Proms before the musical festivities begin:

          Prom 1: The First Night
          Prom 2: My Fair Lady
          PCM 1: Alice Coote & Julius Drake
          Prom 7: Handel/Le Concert Spirituel (free Prom)
          Prom 9: Beethoven/Boulez/WEDO 1
          PSM 1: JSB, The Art of the Fugue
          PCM 2: Tenebrae
          Prom 12: Beethoven/Boulez/WEDO 3
          Prom 13: Beethoven/Boulez/WEDO 4
          Prom 18: Beethoven 9, WEDO/Barenboim
          PSM 2: Les 24 Violons du Roy
          Prom 20: Wallace & Gromit
          PCM 3: La Tarantella
          Prom 23: RVW/Delius/Walton, BBC NOW/Otaka
          Prom 26: JSB, Mass in b
          PCM 4: Debussy/Ravel
          Prom 39: Berlioz, Requiem, BBC NOW/Fischer
          PCM 5: Nicola Benedetti & friends
          Prom 43: RPO/Dutoit/Grosvenor
          Prom 50: BBC SO/Vänskä/Collins
          Prom 59: The Broadway Sound
          Prom 60: The Marriage of Figaro
          Prom 63: BPO/Rattle 1
          Prom 64: BPO/Rattle 2
          PCM 8: Debussy, Pierre-Laurent Aimard
          Prom 70: Desert Island Discs 70th Anniversary
          Prom 71: Saint Louis Symphony Orchestra/Robertson/Tetzlaff
          Prom 73: VPO/Haitink 1
          Prom 76: The Last Night

          So we're up to 29 sold-out Proms; not bad.

          I have to admit that I've read 2 different explanations about the RAH and lets apart from the explanations given here, and my head still swims at trying to grasp the idea completely. It does make sense that initially 'sold out' concerts had some of those tickets in the hands of box owners, although the subsequent resale and variation in appearances on the sold out list, between postings, would indicate some release of those box seats, at the least.

          That's also an interesting point about concerts during the actual time of the Olympics, July 27 through August 12, perhaps not getting as much traffic as they might if the Olympics weren't at the same time. However, from looking at those programs that aren't quite in the "House Full" category, I suspect that many of them wouldn't necessarily have sold out in advance anyway. In Prom 19, for example, Pelle Gudmunsen-Holmgreen and Rued Langgaard aren't exactly big box-office names. Anyway, just a bit less than 15 hours to go :) .

          Comment

          • amcluesent
            Full Member
            • Sep 2011
            • 100

            Hardly an auspicious start. 10 minutes gone, we've had maybe 4 minutes of music and a lorra, lorra of prattle from Trelawny. We can only hope the ratio of music to blathering improves.

            EDIT - I've turned off now, Trelawny's bellowed banalities are quite insuferable
            Last edited by amcluesent; 13-07-12, 19:03.

            Comment

            • Nick Armstrong
              Host
              • Nov 2010
              • 26574

              Rather lumbering attempt at Cockaigne on now
              "...the isle is full of noises,
              Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
              Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
              Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."

              Comment

              • notinajumalainukhaju

                Full, detailed programme for the entire season

                Originally posted by rubbernecker View Post
                Why can't they list the performers as well as the repertoire on the weekly view? So infuriating...
                Yes, where is the common and garden full programme with all details - of works and performers?

                Comment

                • notinajumalainukhaju

                  Originally posted by Andrew Slater View Post
                  You're all too kind

                  Perhaps I was trying to make myself redundant

                  Anyway, I've finished highlighting and have now copied it into two printable versions, in the usual 2-column and 3-column formats, and have posted 'in the usual place'. (There's now a link to it on the blog, as well as one to this messageboard.)

                  (I've marked the printables as 'Version 1' so that I can re-issue if any errors are found or if any important details alter before the performances. If anybody spots any errors, please let me know.)
                  Many thanks!

                  Comment

                  • PhilipT
                    Full Member
                    • May 2011
                    • 423

                    Originally posted by David Underdown View Post
                    The privately owned seats in any case form a very small percentage of the 6000 odd places in the hall
                    It isn't as small a percentage as all that, David. The figures from the RAH's website here are that the Ordinary Let capacity is 3,929, and the Exclusive Let capacity is 5,250. However, those figures assume that (a) the Choir seats are on sale, and (b) the Arena is full of chairs which are on sale. The capacity can indeed approach 6,000 at a Prom (assuming close to 1,000 standing in the Arena as opposed to about 740 seated, and 505 in the Gallery).

                    Comment

                    • french frank
                      Administrator/Moderator
                      • Feb 2007
                      • 30470

                      Originally posted by notinajumalainukhaju View Post
                      Many thanks!
                      Referring, of course, to Andrew's blog and one-page Proms listings: links are on the forum homepage in the left-hand sidebar.

                      Not to mention, of course (as I am about to do), bluestateprommer's concert entries in the forum calendar, which generate the 7-days ahead Proms concert reminders at the foot of the forum homepage.
                      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.

                      Comment

                      • amcluesent
                        Full Member
                        • Sep 2011
                        • 100

                        Surely I am not along in thinking Trelawny's shouting and bellowing is ruining every Prom? He really is extraordinarily annoying, I have to leap for the remote to hit the mute button.

                        Comment

                        • EdgeleyRob
                          Guest
                          • Nov 2010
                          • 12180

                          Originally posted by amcluesent View Post
                          Surely I am not along in thinking Trelawny's shouting and bellowing is ruining every Prom? He really is extraordinarily annoying, I have to leap for the remote to hit the mute button.
                          You are not alone

                          Comment

                          • Barbirollians
                            Full Member
                            • Nov 2010
                            • 11753

                            I agree - he is dreadful . What a shame that in recompense the Zimbabwean authorities did not offer hima long term job .

                            Comment

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