The biggest party of the season - the Last Night of the Proms - certainly lived up to its reputation! Yesterday evening's eclectic concert included a bit of everything - from Saint‐Saëns to spirituals, from powerful Puccini arias to the Pink Panther, from William Walton to Welsh nursery tunes (arr. Grace Williams), and from Samuel Coleridge-Taylor's wistfully appropriate Summer Is Gone to the Match of the Day theme (part of a faboo new work Extra Time by Ian Farrington).
This year's soloist, US soprano Angel Blue charmed the pants off the Promenaders, not least with her wickedly flirtatious Al pensar en el dueño de mis amores (Carceleras) (from a zarzuela (operetta) Las hijas del Zebedeo by Ruperto Chapi) [no video of the night, unfortunately, but here she is performing it in 2016], during which she tossed flowers into the audience and even handed one to our conductor Sakari Oramo, who then proceeded to try and conduct with it (until it broke)!
Musical arranger and star pianist Sir Stephen Hough was also centre-stage and, as an encore, performed a hilarious and breath-taking arrangement of tunes from the Sound of Music mingled with bits of Beethoven and Ravel, as well as providing superb accompaniment to Miss Blue's gorgeous vocals.
Following the interval, it was time for the real event - as the BBC Symphony Orchestra and Chorus and BBC Singers launched themselves into the traditional opener by the Proms founder Sir Henry Wood's Fantasia on British Sea Songs. Then it was time for Miss Blue to make her triumphal return - complete with Union Jack "joker hat" - for the first of the three songs that make up the finale [any of which could, and should, be our National Anthem], Rule, Britannia!:
...closely followed by a second, Land of Hope and Glory:
After that exhausting double-bill, it was time for Mr Oromo's conductor's speech - in which he compared the successes of the Proms season with the equally-triumphant-for-the-UK summer of sporting events, including the Olympics. Three cheers for Sir Henry, and it was on with the show! The triumvirate of flag-waving, sing-a-long numbers concluded with the classic Jerusalem:
With that, God Save the King, and Auld Lang Syne, it was all over for another year. After eight weeks of serious musicianship, and seventy-three concerts up and down the country, it was just what we deserved...
And what images! All that and a brilliant waistcoat!
ReplyDeleteI have a Union Jack waistcoat (needless to say) - not quite as posh as Sakari Oramo's, of course.
DeleteI do hope you can see the videos, as well as the photo! Jx
Vous les Britanniques savez comment célébre votre britannicité. :)
ReplyDeleteLa saison des Proms de fin d’année que vous célébrez aujourd’hui rendrait la reine Elizabeth fière.
* d’Anjou
We do love a good ol' flag-waving sing-a-long! Shame about all those bloody EU flags. Jx
DeleteI love Hope and Glory, especially when it swells up and everyone in the audience lets rip.
ReplyDeleteIt's the most rousing of tunes! Believe me, we were "letting rip" here at home. Jx
DeleteIt was the best I can remember. Other years have had wonderful sections but this one was a completely fabulous evening from start to finish.
ReplyDeleteAngel Blue was just amazing.
and
Three cheers for Sir Henry!
Hip, hip, hoorah!
DeleteHip, hip, hoorah!
Hip, hip, hoorah!
Jx
I'll have to catch it in-line somewhere...in the meantime, thanks for this post
ReplyDeleteAh - I wondered whether the videos would be available outside the UK. I might upload them for you. Jx
DeleteI think some people can get them, but it probably requires payment. Pretty sure the Beeb will always have the Proms or there'd be worse shin-dig than in Cromwell's day!
DeleteUploaded direct to the blog for your (and our American cousins') delectation, Dinah! Jx
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