so there is no prom at RAH on a saturday night 23rd July? Oh dear
Proms 2022
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Originally posted by ucanseetheend View Postso there is no prom at RAH on a saturday night 23rd July? Oh dearMajor Denis Bloodnok, Indian Army (RTD) Coward and Bar, currently residing in Barnet, Hertfordshire!
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Originally posted by Andrew View PostPerhaps the definition of a Radio 3 listener is one who can listen to Rimsky-Korsakov's Scheherazade without being reminded of the early episodes of "Paul Temple". I'm sorry to have to admit that my exposure to Radio 4extra precludes me from qualifying....."...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..."
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Originally posted by Nick Armstrong View PostWell I seem to qualify despite being a Radio 4extra Paul Temple addict - can’t recall ever hearing the R-K… just the immortal Vivian Ellis theme tune (plus bits of Schubert etc strummed at odd moments by ‘Steve’ at the pianoforte…)Major Denis Bloodnok, Indian Army (RTD) Coward and Bar, currently residing in Barnet, Hertfordshire!
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Originally posted by Andrew View PostThe later series used the "Coronation Scot" by Vivian Ellis but the earlier ones used the R-K tune.
They’ve passed me by then! Was that pre-the Peter Coke/Marjorie Westbury duo?"...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..."
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Originally posted by Andrew View PostThe later series used the "Coronation Scot" by Vivian Ellis
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Originally posted by ucanseetheend View Posttwo kids morning and afternoon Proms. No evening Prom that's my point
London has it lucky. It’s good that other parts of the UK are getting a look in. The Proms is supposed to be a great national music festival, but until now it has only been accessible in the bottom right hand corner of the nation.
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostYes, well…
London has it lucky. It’s good that other parts of the UK are getting a look in. The Proms is supposed to be a great national music festival, but until now it has only been accessible in the bottom right hand corner of the nation.
It's a minor point, but for better or worse London has better communications to the rest of the country than pretty much anywhere else, and a wider choice of accommodation. I have met, in previous seasons, regular Prommers who lived in Liverpool, Manchester, Birmingham, Banff (Scotland, not Canada), Southampton, Scunthorpe, Lyme Regis and Gothenburg, to name just the places that come to mind. Anyone who says that the Proms is not accessible to them is either ignorant or deliberately lying - those people did not find the Proms inaccessible.
More importantly, the whole point of a festival is that by concentrating a large number of performances in a single place - any single place - and a short space of time it makes it worthwhile for people travelling from a distance to go. The travel costs are amortised, and accommodation per night is often cheaper. This point may be lost on some people, but it is not lost on those who go to, say, Glastonbury. If you asked those who go to Glastonbury whether it is a national festival, I think they would tell you that it is - it attracts people from all over the country. In my own case, I have never been to the Edinburgh Festival, or Aldeburgh, (or, for that matter, Salzburg or Bayreuth) and I would rather like to go to them all sometime, but I do not think any good would be served by having those festivals put on one performance in a season in my home city of Winchester.
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Whilst London is evidently more accessible than anywhere else in the UK that doesn’t make the Proms financially accessible for most people. Post lockdown London hotels have put up prices by about 30 per cent . The proms coincide with the height of the tourist season - there are no discounts . The hotel I used to stay at was £150 a night - now its £230 . Yes you can stay cheaper but having stayed at about 50 different London hotels over the years anything under £150 is either going to be a long tube journey or grim. So a night at the proms for 2 with rail travel and a meal would be £550 - and that’s without lunches and tube so more like £600.There hasn’t been a concert so far worth that sort of outlay.
The only things that would have tempted me over the last few months have been the ROH Grimes and Jenufa. Very annoying that the former never got streamed…
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Originally posted by Nick Armstrong View Post
They’ve passed me by then! Was that pre-the Peter Coke/Marjorie Westbury duo?
back on the Proms, my Sounds App took me to the Sunday lunchtime Prom from Belfast. I'm sorry to say I was unimpressed with the mix of music offered in this Prom. Maybe I ought to try and "get" (=understand) the more eclectic offerings of the Proms season, but the effort expended seems excessive for a meagre reward. Sorry, but there it is. Sunday evening's offering of "The Wreckers" was tremendous though!Major Denis Bloodnok, Indian Army (RTD) Coward and Bar, currently residing in Barnet, Hertfordshire!
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Originally posted by Andrew View PostYes, the earlier ones had other performers, whose names escape me at the moment.
back on the Proms, my Sounds App took me to the Sunday lunchtime Prom from Belfast. I'm sorry to say I was unimpressed with the mix of music offered in this Prom. Maybe I ought to try and "get" (=understand) the more eclectic offerings of the Proms season, but the effort expended seems excessive for a meagre reward. Sorry, but there it is. Sunday evening's offering of "The Wreckers" was tremendous though!
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