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Wonderful Prom This Evening!

Well, given obviously personal tastes which are not assessments of quality anyway, the Henry Wood Promenade Concerts are always wonderful. Now hosted by BBC Radio Three and based primarily in London's Royal Albert Hall with satellite concerts in other cities, this is the world's largest, annual, international music festival.

And not a muddy field and plastic khazi in sight.

This evening's special - the first of two - was from the Ulster Hall in Belfast; and of music and readings celebrating the 100th Anniversary of... The Shipping Forecast!

That is the serious, technical weather-forecast issued daily by the Meteorological Office and broadcast on BBC Radio Four, for mariners and others in British Isles coastal regions - its early forms mentioned farmers too. However, largely due to its telegrammatic format and to Britain and Ireland being islands in the NE corner of the Atlantic, it has gained an unexpectedly large audience who love its poetic litany.

The concert also acknowledged the Royal National Lifeboat Institution, the charity celebrating its 200th Anniversary of, as it says itself, saving lives at sea.

......

The second? It has just started: led by Anna Lapwood, the English composer and the Royal Albert Hall's organist-in-residence, as an overnight event, in that venue! She is used to playing the magnificent 9999-pipe instrument there nocturnally, but that's when rehearsing alone apart from RAH night-shift staff.

The radio is one in the background now, but very quietly as I don't want to disturb my neighbour beyond our very thin party wall! I didn't quite catch the introduction but I think she's playing an organ arrangement of music from the Star Wars films.

As she says, good film music is as valid as any of the "classical" or indeed Classical, works she also plays. Indeed the connection struck me a long time ago, between for example, John Williams, Sergei Prokoviev and Felix Mendelssohn: the last wrote for a stage-play not films of course, but all three composed orchestral music to accompany dramatic works.

The concert will not be all organ music. There will be other performers too.
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supersnipe · 61-69, M

Over the last few years (since retirement) I've started going to the 'Proms' again. My parents used to take me during my schooldays. The Royal Albert Hall is a great venue! I can remember the fountain with coloured illumination which played before the concerts and during the interval. Sadly this has now disappeared. Tonight's going to be 'The Planets' - I have seen that at the Proms live. The ethereal sound of the choir right at the end of 'Neptune' is something I shall always remember.
ArishMell · 70-79, M
I went to bed listening to the first hour - the film music arranged for organ was from The Pirates of the Caribbean, not Star Wars,[i] which feature in tonight's (Saturday's) astrally-themed, regular "Prom". This opening set was followed by a musical tour of very lively Scandinavian, Shetland and Canadian traditional music by the Norwegian group, Barokksolistene.

My radio-alarm woke me at just after six, and I heard the last hour culminating in a set by an American singer/songwriter, whom I'm afraid I can't credit properly. I didn't get his name and strangely neither the [i]Radio Times
nor its "Proms Guide" name him - either for space reasons or they didn't have the name at time of preparing the magazine. Anna Lapwood credited a Royal Albert Hall security staff member, Darren, for suggesting this performer to her. She curated the whole show, conducting when not playing the organ.

It was the first all-night Promenade Concert (I thought yesterday they were saying the second?) but certainly not the first broadcast all-night performance.

For about twelve or thirteen years ago the BBC broadcast the world premiere of Max Richter's Sleep, a single work lasting some eight hours. I forget the venue, but it was not the Royal Albert Hall. The audience was encouraged to bring a camping mattress or sleeping-bag, and no-one would mind if they snoozed! It is really a chamber-music work for a small ensemble and a soprano, who sings repetitative vocalese passages at intervals throughout it. The musicians played in a sort of rota so had some rests between their own times on stage. I left my bedside radio on, at very low volume, waking now and then to hear it still playing - usually it seemed during the rather aethereal vocalese.
Picklebobble2 · 56-60, M
I've become something of an admirer of Anna Lapwood over the years.
A wonderful organist; writer and arranger.

I think the proms. are a great way to get some lesser known gems to a wider audience
FreddieUK · 70-79, M
As a long-term organ enthusiast and would-be player (home only these days) it has been a delight to see the instrument finally released from the church organ loft, where it has been a magnificent and still is, back into popular culture where it was in the late 19th century and early 20th. Anna Lapwood, with her delightful personality, has been the best ambassador in the modern era.
ArishMell · 70-79, M
@FreddieUK She is indeed!

Many churches now are also used as live music venues, mainly for choral and chamber works but also organ recitals.*

I think one of the biggest mistakes the BBC has made in recent years has to been to reduce Radio Two to little more than a wall-to-wall pop channel with a token touch of folk and rock shows.

Among the lost programmes were ones devoted to the Big Band era, Brass Bands... and theatre / cinema organs.

.......

* Chamber recitals.....

I once attended a lecture in a museum where a chamber-music recital in the main hall displaced us for that evening to a side room. We asked not to applaud our speaker lest it disturb the music...

As we muttered about their music disturbing us, one wag in the lecture audience suggested we wave instead...

So, to the guest's great amusement, we all did!
exexec · 70-79, C
I watch the Proms on Youtube every year and enjoy the great music.

 
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