Originally posted by Stanley Stewart
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Prom 75: 10.09.16 - Last Night of the Proms
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Nicholas Kenyon in today's Guardian attempts to defend the Last Night in the context of Brexit. While making the case for the internationalism of the season and of the traditions of the Proms he fails IMHO to prevent fears that it may be seen as a celebration of isolationism - or indeed hijacked as such by some flag-wavers in the audience.
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Originally posted by kernelbogey View PostNicholas Kenyon in today's Guardian attempts to defend the Last Night in the context of Brexit. While making the case for the internationalism of the season and of the traditions of the Proms he fails IMHO to prevent fears that it may be seen as a celebration of isolationism - or indeed hijacked as such by some flag-wavers in the audience.
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Originally posted by Ferretfancy View Postand as far as I know nobody has succeeded in building a neutron bomb yet, so you may have a long wait.
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Anyone wishing to discuss this year's flag-waving issues should join the Referendum debate so that the traditional aspects of the evening can be continued 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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I think I was focussing on the Last Night, including the paraphernalia of flags, not on the referendum per se, on which I was not expressing any opinion whatever.
As to the programme, I look forward to JDF as I said, though I do wish he had something more interesting to sing.
The Serenade to Music is a wonderful piece, a moment of welcome calm, and entirely appropriate to the spirit of the Proms.
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Originally posted by french frank View PostAnyone wishing to discuss this year's flag-waving issues should join the Referendum debate so that the traditional aspects of the evening can be continued here.
Isn't the entire flag-waving business at the LNOTP a long outmoded "tradition" that has no place in an annual concert series featuring orchestras, artists and music from many nations and attended and otherwise listened to by similarly international audiences in a world whose map hasn't been coloured pink in decades and in which attempts to pander to such detritus as might remain of the British Oompah risk at best detracting from and at worset undermining the festival's most positive aspects?
Perhaps the introduction of the waving of EU flags might instigate a new "tradition" or introduce a variation on that old one but, even were it to do so, who needs flag waving by audience members at concerts and what in any case is it supposed to achieve and for whom, other than distracting other audience members from the music being performed?
Those other "traditional" aspects of the LNOTP, namely those eternally recycled sea songs, the much misunderstood and misrepresented Jerusalem whose music was, as NK notes, written by a German influenced composer and orchestrated by a better known one and the first Pomp and Circumstance March by said better known one to which Arthur Christher Benson's Land of Hope and Glory doggerel (for all that it was suggested by King Edward VII) was later to be appended despite Elgar's reservations are surely being allowed to make ever greater mockeries of themselves with each September that passes; this can hardly do the Proms' reputation any great favours, can it?...Last edited by ahinton; 10-09-16, 15:03.
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Originally posted by Prommer View PostI think I was focussing on the Last Night, including the paraphernalia of flags, not on the referendum per se, on which I was not expressing any opinion whatever.
As to the programme, I look forward to JDF as I said, though I do wish he had something more interesting to sing.
The Serenade to Music is a wonderful piece, a moment of welcome calm, and entirely appropriate to the spirit of the Proms.
And yes, RVW's Serenade to Music is indeed a most wonderfully moving work, to the performance of which I can only hope that flag wavers will discreetly and respectfully retrain themselves from waving their flags, whiever ones they may be.Last edited by ahinton; 10-09-16, 15:13.
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From the classical archive, 6 June 1969: the patriotic anthems Land of Hope and Glory and Rule, Britannia! have been banished from the Last Night of the Proms
And yes, I omitted reference to Arne's Britannia Waives the Rules piece from my last; this is perhaps even dafter in the context of the second decade of the 21st century than all those other LNOTP "traditional" items that are regurgitated annually.
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Originally posted by Beef Oven! View PostMatch of the day isn’t all it’s cracked up to be, but Glolovkin and Kell go at it after 10.00 - so it’s gonna be Last Night on the iPlayer, I’m off to watch the fight in the pub.
Maybe you should frequent better quality pubs!
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