Originally posted by jayne lee wilson
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It is no doubt a matter of pragmatism that certain things get programmed for ease, or because of expectation....the BBC orchestras will get some outings, Beethoven symphonies to sell tix, whichever big foreign orchestras or star conductors or soloists are doing the rounds. But even allowing for that, the paying public, and that includes licence fee payers and those who buy tickets, should surely expect high standards of thought and imagination in programming.
the expanding nature of the Proms, which I am sure makes sense from a financial point of view, and to develop the "brand" ,does allow for interesting programming outside the core classical repertoire,which could be musically exciting, and commercially successful.
I really do fail to see how programming Paloma Faith at a late night Proms event fulfills any useful criteria. I don't include management box ticking in useful criteria. She has, and may well deserve, plenty of good platforms for her talent. Her audience isn"t struggling to find opportunities to see her, and she gets broadcast.
It really does smack of lazy or too opportunistic programming,to me.
Last year,I went to see the World Routes Prom, principally because I was planning to go to the main classical prom that night, and because I have a modest interest in world music.
It was a superb concert, in the main I think because it gave the artists the kind of platform they they really would struggle to find elsewhere,and because they were of high quality.
Now, it may have been lazy programming, ( of the " call the agent,see who they have") kind, but it didn't feel like it. It also had a connection with the radio programming that connected the event to the music,and so had a logic to it.
It is really surely not too much to ask for that kind of consistency, logic, imagination in programming? This years pop ( and some other?)offerings feel a lot too much like opportunities to combine ticket sales with fulfilling a box ticking management remit that sees R3 managers desperately trying to find a short cut to public funding approval.
No challenge, no thought, No creative programming, no point really.
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