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Music: BBC Proms 2021 season
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The BBC Proms in photos: the best snaps taken at the 2021 Proms so far
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The Vaughan Williams, which sets lines from The Merchant of Venice, was the perfect opener for the occasion, its wistful melodiousness just joyous enough, and showcasing four distinctive soloists. The BBC Singers, high up in the choir stalls, added to the moonlit atmosphere with disembodied voices off that belonged more to The Tempest.
Poulenc’s Organ Concerto was the work that you won’t hear anywhere else – every good Proms programme has one. It’s a curious piece, gothic and severe one moment, delighting in souped-up harmonies the next. Daniel Hyde tamed the beast that is the Albert Hall’s 9,999-pipe organ, revelling in the instrument’s possibilities yet always in conversation with the BBC Symphony Orchestra’s strings.
First Night of the Proms, Hyde, BBCSO, Stasevska review - levitational ecstasies
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29 July, 2021 â By Michael White
The Royal Albert Hall
âWEâVE got as many Plan Bs as will fit into our heads,â the director of the Proms, David Pickard, told me last week. And he probably wasnât exaggerating.
When the worldâs greatest music festival opens this Friday July 29, it will be welcomed with open arms as a return to normality after last yearâs ghost season â running for six weeks, with 61 concerts, real live audiences, and a proper Last Night on September 11.
But, as Pickard admits, âitâs a fluid situation with a lot that could go wrong: the likelihood of artists being pinged and forced to isolate is bound to trip us up, so we live from day to day and keep our options open â which is why there are still gaps in the programme that weâll fill in due courseâ.