It was with a palpable sense of relief last night that we welcomed the return of one of the eternal highlights of our "Social Calendar" - its final denouement, indeed - the Last Night of the Proms, in front of a (traditionally "rowdy") live audience again [and in the 150th anniversary year of Royal Albert Hall, no less]! The Madam and I, despite being on our own at home (not even a Zoom meet-up, as was the case with last year's "cut-down version"), grabbed our Union Jacks and cleared our voices for the traditional sing-along...
For once, there wasn't too much dross to sit through in the run-up to the finale, thank goodness [of course we only joined it in part 2, after the interval], as it opened with the jolly Juba Dance by Florence Price.
The duo of Tango numbers (Piazzolla's Libertango and Aníbal Troilo's Sur) featuring the rising star accordionist Ksenija Sidorova was actually rather brilliant [no footage our there yet; thanks BBC!]. The round-the-UK folk song segment, not so much.
Apart from the marvellous BBC Symphony Orchestra, the BBC Singers and the genial conductor Sakari Oramo, the real star of the show, however, was Australian "James Corden looky-likey" tenor Stuart Skelton. He had already tackled Wagner in the first half, and in the second not only sang the traditional Brigg Fair (as arranged by Percy Grainger) and the aforementioned Tango elegy Sur, but also performed a sentimental version of Peter Allen's I Still Call Australia Home - wearing a sequinned shirt in tribute to the uber-camp singer-songwriter [see here] (who was, of course, immortalised by the lovely Hugh Jackman in the musical The Boy from Oz).
That done, the "fun bit" began - starting with the customary opener, Sir Henry Wood's Fantasia on British Sea-Songs, with the audience all bobbing along to the shanties and doing the "fake dabbing-of-the-eyes" for "There's No Place Like Home" (Tom Bowling), before Mr Skelton returned to the stage, this time in full Aussie cricket gear, for the rousing Rule, Britannia!
We'd hardly put our flags down for a swig of booze, and we were off again, singing along with gusto to the "National-Anthem-in-all-but-name" Edward Elgar's Land of Hope and Glory:
After Sakari Oramo's heartfelt speech, highlighting the devastating impact the pandemic had had upon the lives and livelihoods of musicians and singers over the past year, as well as the traditional "three cheers" to the founder of the Proms Sir Henry, we headed to the finale, with that other magnificent sing-along number Hubert Parry's Jerusalem:
And, with The National Anthem and the closing Auld Lang Syne, that was it for another year...
Utterly wonderful - and a tradition that should be preserved against "the slings and arrows" of hand-wringing "wokeness", self-delusional Europhiles and the rest!
Read about this year's Last Night of the Proms in detail, song by song, courtesy of the BBC.
Sounds delightful. Of course the US can't have nice things like this. Tis a pity.
ReplyDeleteI'm sure there are cultural events (perhaps not of the magnitude of The Proms Season, which goes on every day from July to September) of this sort to enjoy, but I assume, given the commercial nature of American media, you might need to travel in person to The Met in New York, the LA Phil, Boston Symphony Hall, Dallas Meyerson, Chicago Symphony or similar in order to see or hear any performances - or are there classical music TV channels out there? Jx
DeleteWell, kismet, again. I did my Sunday post on Jennifer Warnes... and I kept coming on YouTube vids of her singing at Night of the Proms... which I thought must be some PBS fundraising scheme. True, yes? That she hosted one? And also... I was researching a bit on The Three Degrees and came across a pic of them onstage dancing with a young Prince Charles... I thought that was a Night of the Proms photo as well? Not sure about the last one. Prince Charles was quite nice looking. Thanks for sharing this.
ReplyDeleteConfusingly, Belgium also has an event called "Night At The Proms", at which Ms Warnes and Mr Cocker appeared in 1992 when An Officer and a Gentleman (from whence their "one-hit wonder" duet came) was presumably still in collective memories. Our Proms season is more-or-less entirely classical music-based, and has been going since 1895. The Belgian version was invented in 1985...
DeleteQuite where The Three Degrees (famously Prince Charles's fave band in the 1970s) enter into all this is quite beyond me. Jx
Sounds lovely. I've always wanted to be the guy boom boom booming on the big drums.
ReplyDeleteOh, to be let loose on the percussion in a big orchestra! One of my absolute fascinations is to watch an orchestra with all its various "component parts" working like a well-oiled machine. Live, of course. Jx
DeleteBack....long ago, one could not get a front row swat ay the Proms final. Even then, toffs from the "better" universities had snagged them. But I did go, once, and enjoyed it .Now, I hear some of it on the radio and feel sad that England is such an effing mess today....
ReplyDeleteI always fancied being one of the "Promenaders" - the standing crowd - and toot a car horn at inappropriate moments during the Hornpipe.
DeleteI love the sense of pride one gets at the rousing moments of the Last Night - and I too look around and think "what happened to the 'Great' in Great Britain?" Jx
Jerusalem always makes me tear up - it's a lovely bit of nostalgia.
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We're usually singing too loud to get teary... Jx
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