Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie
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Proms
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Apologies to Harriet Havard, Cockney Sparrow and Mr GongGong - I have seemingly deleted the posts that were in a new thread on the Welcome board but which made reference to the Prom with the Pet Shop Boys. This was not censorship but incompetence on my part.
Cockney Sparrow also referred to this Prom here.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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Originally posted by kea View PostThere's also the whole thing where people complain about how the programming is too populist on R3 and features too much chatter and excerpts of longer works etc, then when the Proms season is announced with no (compulsory, anyway) chatter and lots of solid performances of the core repertoire by distinguished artists it instead becomes how unimaginative the programming is.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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Originally posted by french frank View PostApologies to Harriet Havard, Cockney Sparrow and Mr GongGong - I have seemingly deleted the posts that were in a new thread on the Welcome board but which made reference to the Prom with the Pet Shop Boys. This was not censorship but incompetence on my part.
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Originally posted by Honoured Guest View PostSomeone correct me if I've missed something, but it seems a gaping and peculiar omission that there's no world music at all, neither global/fusion nor traditional/classical. Surely there should be something in the BBC Proms every year because world music is part of Radio 3's core output and the Proms include a wide range of music and are a good opportunity to introduce different music to people, and several posters above have given the all-night Indian classical recitals of yore a special mention.
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Originally posted by Honoured Guest View PostSo, the proposal is one single BBC Proms-branded concert in each of eight locations dotted around the UK? What repertoire and artists would you recommend?
The RSNO in Glasgow used to do a brief 'Proms' season in the summer, but it was mostly of popular/populist stuff & I'm not sure if they actually took the seats out of the stalls areas. Obviously Edinburgh has its own successful festival & wouldn't need to piggy-back on the Proms.
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Sceptics about visiting orchestras might be pleasantly surprised by the Borusan Istanbul Philharmonic, who are appearing with their conductor Sascha Goetzel on 29th July.
I have their recording of Hindemith's SMOTOCMVW and Respighi's Belkis Queen of Sheba plus Schmitt's La Tragedie de Salome, and it's very good. It certainly showed a level of confidence in the orchestra to issue their first CD with that programme.
I understand that Goetzel is virtually the founder of the band.
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Originally posted by Flosshilde View PostNo, I think the proposal was for a weekly concert, which would make it 7 or 8 concerts from each location.
The RSNO in Glasgow used to do a brief 'Proms' season in the summer, but it was mostly of popular/populist stuff & I'm not sure if they actually took the seats out of the stalls areas. Obviously Edinburgh has its own successful festival & wouldn't need to piggy-back on the Proms.
Oh, how I remember those (R)SNO Proms! They were my introduction to classical music as an Edinburgh schoolboy. The seats were taken out and we did sit on the floor in the stalls (although there were some seats provided for older folk!) The SNO used to do a 'Last night of the Proms' in Edinburgh, Glasgow, Aberdeen and Inverness which led to the phrase 'the last of the Last nights' being bandied around the orchestra before their summer hols.
Happy days.
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amateur51
Originally posted by Flosshilde View PostNo, I think the proposal was for a weekly concert, which would make it 7 or 8 concerts from each location.
The RSNO in Glasgow used to do a brief 'Proms' season in the summer, but it was mostly of popular/populist stuff & I'm not sure if they actually took the seats out of the stalls areas. Obviously Edinburgh has its own successful festival & wouldn't need to piggy-back on the Proms.
What nation he has not as yet mentioned
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Originally posted by amateur51 View PostEdinburgh was not a nation, last time I looked.
Whereas the BBC is the national broadcaster (& even covers N.I.) so should, perhaps, spread its riches round.
I wouldn't have thought you were one of the 'keep everything in London & sod the rest of you' crowd, Ams
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Originally posted by Flosshilde View PostQuite.
Whereas the BBC is the national broadcaster (& even covers N.I.) so should, perhaps, spread its riches round.
I wouldn't have thought you were one of the 'keep everything in London & sod the rest of you' crowd, Ams
Ah well.
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amateur51
Originally posted by Flosshilde View PostQuite.
Whereas the BBC is the national broadcaster (& even covers N.I.) so should, perhaps, spread its riches round.
I wouldn't have thought you were one of the 'keep everything in London & sod the rest of you' crowd, Ams
I rarely attend Proms concerts, despite having lived in London for over 40 years. The Hall is uncomfortable, frequently a sauna in hot weather if we get any, and without easy access to useful public transport. Getting home to North West London by bus can be a nightmare. The catering is expensive.
For me the answer is to broadcast all concerts on radio as now and also to increase significantly the number of TV broadcasts and yes the cinema audiences, which have been shown to be a new market for opera audiences. My radio/TV are not in London, they're in my living room. They'd be there for concerts broadcast from Bodelwyddan and Kirkcudbright too
Later: I've forgotten to mention the incredible disparity in acoustics according to where you sit - a nightmare But it does hold over 5,000 people
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Originally posted by Flosshilde View PostNo, I think the proposal was for a weekly concert, which would make it 7 or 8 concerts from each location.
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