Originally posted by Petrushka
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Who is this woman?
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Originally posted by Petrushka View PostI'm sure Sir Andrew wasn't surrounded by three beautiful women and a warhorse in realityIt 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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The two classical performers were in the same concert so could have had a promo photograph taken together. Katie Derham would have been pretty much around. Don't know about Paloma Faith. If it was photoshopped it's a good job, though in such bright sunlight I would have expected people to be squinting more ...
Well, here's the photo shoot. No sign of Paloma Faith ... It looks as if the green carpet has been altered to a neatly mown lawn :-)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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Richard Tarleton
Originally posted by french frank View PostIt looks as if the green carpet has been altered to a neatly mown lawn :-)
Not that it matters, nothing is as it appears these days, cheaper than laying turf
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Originally posted by french frank View Postexpect Michael Eavis to announce he intends to build a small **** hotel in the corner of one of his fields for the over 60s who feel uncomfortable about staying in a tent with tens of thousands of teens and twenties in a muddy field. Publicity pic of OAPs sitting on plastic picnic chairs, knotted hankies on heads, nodding away alongside an assortment of Glastonbury regulars, because 'Glastonbury is for everyone'.
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Blotto
Originally posted by cloughie View Post
Originally posted by Petrushka View PostThere have been plenty of young people at the Proms I've attended ...
Trying to attract young people to the Proms by having the likes of Paloma Faith, Pet Shop Boys, Laura Mvula and Jules Buckley (none of whom I'd previously heard of let alone encountered) is totally the wrong way to go about it, as if the Proms have no confidence in the 'product' they are trying to sell.
The BBC has kept faith (no pun intended) with the Proms for the best part of a century but nothing lasts forever and I can already see a marked decline. If care isn't taken that decline will accelerate.
I'm not sure about the object of pop's presence.
Originally posted by french frank View PostNevertheless ... we have to accept that times have changed, particularly in the amount of music that's available to teenagers now and the position which classical music holds in their awareness and listening experience.
Put a 6 Music programme on Radio 3, for example: you will get some 6 Music listeners (not all!) coming over to listen to it. Of those, a few might venture to find out more, or hear the usual Radio 3 output by accident. Of those a few might be captivated and stay for more ... So 2 hours of Saturday Classics (and a special Prom last year) becomes a test case: how many of the 'mights' come to appreciate classical music? Anyone with an answer?
Late Junction was a similar experiment: it was to hook in a non-classical audience - not to widen the experience of Radio 3 listeners. Did it succeed? Look at Radio 3's listening figures since the programme was introduced over ten years ago.
Me, I've learned that the Pet Shop Boys aren't a boy band but a late-middle aged duo, and that Paloma Faith is a pretty mean (as in good, btw) song-and-dance hoofer. Both slightly unexpected hits with the younger audiences. But was that what the programmes were designed to achieve?
Originally posted by Oddball View PostI believe Caliban is on the right track in referring to the old war horse.
Although light hearted in nature, and the conductor certainly does not seem to mind being surrounded by beautiful women (there is hope for us yet!), I think this pic may have a deeper significance, in that it is a visual statement of the aims of the Proms, as formulated for 2014 by the Proms management. That is exquisite soloists, concertos etc, wonderful symphonic works, a "pop" element (Kiss me Kate, Laura Mvula), which inevitably introduces sex into the equation, and the presenter element as typified by Katie
My original query was simply about her stance and posture but her identity explains that, it seems. On the point of sex, though the form is different, we also have Salome in a few days, don't we, which is not without that element and I don't know that Laura Mvula introduces sex so much as the pop groomings may be suggestive of it to us old has-beens. ;)
Originally posted by french frank View PostWell, here's the photo shoot.
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Originally posted by Flosshilde View PostThere are an awful lot of people 60+ who still cling to the music of their youth.
....also the music of ones youth might be Chopin or Wagner....bong ching
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Originally posted by Flosshilde View PostI think that there are a fair few OAPs going to 'Glasto' (sic) already (including the performers - Rolf Harris a few years ago, The Rolling Stones - who's collective age must be about 1000 years, Dolly Parton this year). Kate Moss (the model) pops up regularly, & she must be getting on a bit by now . There are an awful lot of people 60+ who still cling to the music of their youth.
Seeing Hugh Cornwell (their original singer and major songwriter) at a small festival in a three piece band playing substantially newer material last week felt worthwhile, and altogether more enjoyable.
So you can rebrand till you are blue in the teeth, but a discerning audience KNOWS when it is being sold a pup.
Personally,I think that If you wanted to rebrand the Proms for a youth market, Malcolm Maclaren would have been the the best bet. Now HE could have done it, and boy would he have had fun......I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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