The story of the Proms is fascinating, colourful, rousing – and dominated by one organisation in particular. While the famous festival founded by Robert Newman and Henry Wood has been in existence for 127 years, around three-quarters of that has been under the watchful eye of ‘Auntie’ – a period that has seen Proms that range from joyful to doom-laden, from sternly serious to splendidly silly. Here, we present 100 of the most best and memorable Proms of all time (well, during the BBC’s near-100-year tenure…)
And by the way, here are full listings for the 2024 BBC Proms.
Contents
The early BBC years
The 1940s
The 1950s
The 1960s
The 1970s
The 1980s
The 1990s
The 2000s
2010 to the present
The 100 best Proms of all time: the early BBC years
13 August 1927: the first BBC Prom
Auntie takes over. Though the BBC began life in 1922, it was five years later that the organisation took over the running of the Proms. Now 32 years old, the festival itself was very popular but not in the greatest financial health – with co-founder Robert Newman having died the year before, things were looking iffy.
Keen to find a way to broadcast concerts from the Queen’s Hall, the BBC saw its chance… and pounced. ‘When I walked on to the platform for my first Promenade Concert under the British Broadcasting Corporation, I felt really elated,’ wrote conductor Henry Wood later. ‘I realised the work of such a large part of my life had been saved from an untimely death.’
24 August 1927: Brahms, interrupted
After her performance of Brahms’s Violin Concerto grinds to a halt midway, soloist Daisy Kennedy blames a lack of rehearsal time. The BBC denies responsibility.
11 August 1928: The fountain returns
Absent for the first year of the BBC Proms, the decorative fountain is restored to the centre of the Queen’s Hall for the new season. It continues to bring watery relief to hot and sweaty Prommers until 2011.
24 August 1928: Beethoven’s Ninth
Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony is performed in its entirety and with full chorus for the first time since 1902. From now on, it will become a regular part of each Proms season.
08 August 1931: Introducing the BBC SO
Brought together as an ensemble the previous autumn, the BBC Symphony Orchestra makes its Proms debut on the First Night.
22 August 1931: Webern
Anton Webern’s Passacaglia Op. 1 is performed for the first time in Britain, but the critics are largely sniffy about a work they regard as little more than juvenilia.
14 August 1934: Berg
More Second Viennese School delights as, mooted in previous seasons, Alban Berg’s Three Fragments from Wozzeck gets its Proms premiere. Soprano May Blyth is the singer.
19 September 1935: Shostakovich
An all-Russian Prom includes the British premiere of Shostakovich’s First Symphony and an aria from the 28-year-old composer’s opera Lady Macbeth of Mtsensk, a work dismissed in Pravda the next year as ‘a muddle instead of music’.
‘Mr Britten’s cleverness has got the better of him.’
11 August 1938: Great Britten?
A 24-year-old Benjamin Britten (below) gives the world premiere of his Piano Concerto. ‘This is not a stylish work,’ grumps the Musical Times. ‘Mr Britten’s cleverness has got the better of him.’
1 September 1939: Beethoven… and instruments down
After conducting Beethoven’s Second Piano Concerto and Sixth Symphony, Henry Wood announces that the rest of the Proms season is cancelled, as Britain is now at war with Germany.
The 100 best Proms of all time – the 1940s
27 June 1942: The Beeb is back
The BBC has not been in charge of every Proms season since 1927 – on the outbreak of WWII, the corporation made the decision to leave the 1940 and ’41 seasons to others as it hotfooted it out of the capital. When, with things a little quieter, it returned to the helm in 1942, a couple of notable changes had taken place.
Firstly, with the Queen’s Hall having been obliterated by German bombs on the night of 10 May 1941, the festival had moved to a new home at the Royal Albert Hall. Secondly, on 16 August 1941, Henry Wood – not the keenest of orators – had given the first of the conductor’s speeches that would become a regular Last Night of the Proms feature.
29 June 1942: More Shostakovich
In a show of defiance against the German invasion of Russia, Shostakovich’s ‘Leningrad’ Symphony No. 7 receives its first performance in western Europe. The score has been smuggled out of the Soviet Union on microfilm two months earlier.
24 June 1943: A great Fifth
Ralph’s vision of peace. The list of works that have had their first performance at the Proms is both long and distinguished. Few, however, have enjoyed such lasting popularity as Vaughan Williams’s extraordinarily haunting Fifth Symphony.
The work of a composer who, even at 70, was doing nightly duty as a fire-watcher in the event of German air raids, its message seemed to many listeners to be one of a longed-for vision of peace. ‘Its serene loveliness is completely satisfying in these times,’ wrote conductor Adrian Boult to the composer, ‘and shows, as only music can, what we must work for when this madness is over.’
11 July 1943: Sunday service
With the government commandeering the Albert Hall for a meeting to honour China on 7 July, that evening’s Prom has to be postponed four days, making this the first ever Prom to take place on a Sunday.
29 June 1944: Bombs and Bax
As German doodlebugs fall on London, a Prom including works by Bax, Franck and Sibelius brings the regular Albert Hall season to a premature end. Operations transfer to Bedford, where Proms are performed in front of an invited audience.
28 July 1944: Farewell, Sir Henry
An increasingly ill Henry Wood conducts Beethoven’s Seventh Symphony in his last ever Proms appearance. He dies three weeks later, aged 75.
1 July 1945: 50 First Nights
Back at the Albert Hall, the First Night of the Proms’ 50th-anniversary season includes William Walton’s Memorial Fanfare for Henry Wood and, aptly, Elgar’s exuberant Cockaigne (In London Town).
19 July 1947: A new Proms icon
Alongside Adrian Boult and Basil Cameron, the recently knighted Malcolm Sargent conducts the First Night, beginning a close association with the Proms that will continue for 20 years.
12 September 1947: Sound… and vision
The BBC cameras arrive at the Albert Hall, as parts of the Last Night of the Proms are televised for the first time. Many observers are sceptical, and orchestra members struggle under the heat of the TV lights.
The 100 best Proms of all time – the 1950s
16 September 1950: Sargent major
Now the chief conductor of the BBC Symphony Orchestra, Sargent takes solo control of the Last Night.
25 July 1953: Back on the telly
The cameras are coming… With the Queen’s Coronation on 2 June having led to a boom in the sales of television sets across the UK, the BBC decided that now would be a good time to bring the Proms to the small screen again, beginning with the 1953 First Night.
Television had a natural showman in Malcolm ‘Flash Harry’ Sargent, who was positive from the outset, though not everyone was so keen. Many within the BBC didn’t want TV treading on radio’s patch, while others worried about the impact that bulky cameras might have on the experience of concert-goers. Both debates would continue well into the 1980s.
25 August 1953: Hello Hallé
Under John Barbirolli, Mancheser’s historic Hallé becomes the first orchestra from outside London to appear at the Proms. Barbirolli was at one point being eyed up as a possible chief conductor of the Proms, but chose to stay put in Manchester.
19 September 1953: Controversy
Raucous shenanigans by the Promenaders in recent seasons – described by conductor Stanford Robinson as ‘hooliganism’ – lead to Henry Wood’s Fantasia on British Sea Songs being removed from the Last Night. The decision causes an uproar.
27 August 1955: The power of youth
The Albert Hall stage has a fresh-faced look to it, as the National Youth Orchestra of Great Britain performs its first ever Prom, beginning what will become a near-annual tradition.
17 August 1957: He’s here, Ibert, he’s everywhere
The BBC celebrates the tenth anniversary of the Third Programme radio station by commissioning French composer Jacques Ibert’s rowdy Bacchanale. The composer himself is in the audience.
28 August 1958: Bruckner
The Proms hosts its first complete Bruckner symphony since 1903, as the Hallé plays his ‘Romantic’ Fourth.
1 September 1959
In a ‘Masters of the 20th century’ Prom, Sargent conducts works by Sibelius, Stravinsky, Kodály and Shostakovich.
Memorable Proms: the 1960s
23 July 1960: Big changes
The first Prom under the auspices of William Glock as the BBC’s controller of music is rounded off by Dvořák’s Symphony No. 9 ‘From the New World’. For some, Glock will prove to be a disruptive modernist; to others, he is a much-needed breath of fresh air.
31 August 1960: A new Proms favourite
Janet Baker performs an aria from Tippett’s The Midsummer Marriage. It’s the first of 36 appearances from the mezzo, who goes on to become a Proms favourite.
28 July 1961: A statement of intent
How to make a point? One of Glock’s first commissions is Symphonies for piano, wind, harps and percussion by Elisabeth Lutyens, a ferocious critic of the ‘cowpat’ traditional school of English music.
21 August 1961: Opera takes its bow
The Proms hosts its first complete opera performance, as John Pritchard conducts Mozart’s Don Giovanni in a production brought over from Glyndebourne.
14 September 1961: Wait, a Second
Robert Schumann’s Second Symphony enjoys a surprisingly late Proms debut, played by the London Symphony Orchestra under Meredith Davies.
22 July 1963: The Europeans are coming
The hegemony of British conductors at the Proms comes to an end as the Swiss Silvio Varviso takes the baton for Mozart’s opera The Marriage of Figaro. Hungary’s Georg Solti and Italy’s Carlo Maria Giulini follow later in the season.
30 July 1963: A Mahler marvel
The first ever Proms performance of Mahler’s Second Symphony proves such a hit that conductor Leopold Stokowski gets the LSO to play the entire final movement again as an encore.
1 August 1963: A War Requiem
Fifteen months after its premiere in Coventry, Britten conducts his stirring War Requiem. The soloists include soprano Heather Harper and tenor Peter Pears.
6 September 1963: Wagner
Soprano Birgit Nilsson and bass Gottlob Frick join the party as Georg Solti leads a 150th-anniversary Wagner celebration.
13 August 1964: A Mahler premiere
Berthold Goldschmidt conducts the LSO in the world premiere of Mahler’s Tenth Symphony, a work left unfinished at the composer’s death but recently completed by Deryck Cooke.
4 September 1964: The Proms does chamber music
The Amadeus Quartet does its best to fill the vast spaces of the Albert Hall with a performance of the ‘Emperor’ String Quartet at the start of an all-Haydn Prom.
1 September 1965: An icon is introduced
Featuring Jacqueline du Pré in Elgar’s Cello Concerto, Malcolm Sargent conducts a Prom celebrating his 70th birthday (a day that actually fell back in April).
Du Pré, incidentally, first performed at the Proms in 1963, playing the same Elgar Concerto with Sargent. That performance proved so popular that she returned with it for both the 1964 and 1965 Proms. Indeed, she would return to the festival every year until 1969.
17 August 1966: The Russians are coming
Shostakovich, Rachmaninov and Tchaikovsky are on the bill as the Proms welcomes its first ever overseas orchestra, the Moscow Symphony, conducted by Gennady Rozhdestvensky.
17 September 1966: Martha!
A 25-year-old Martha Argerich wows the Last Night audience with her Proms debut in Prokofiev’s Piano Concerto No. 3 (one of the greatest piano concertos of all time). It will be another 26 years before the Argentinian makes a return visit to the festival.
16 September 1967: A poignant farewell
Suffering from pancreatic cancer, Malcolm Sargent was too ill to conduct any Proms in the 1967 season. Nonetheless, come the Last Night, he appeared at the Albert Hall one final time to give a speech. ‘Next year, the 74th season of the Henry Wood Promenade Concerts begins on July 20th,’ he told the audience. ‘I’ve been invited to be here on that night. I have accepted the invitation.’ He died on 3 October.
19 July 1968: Colin leads the goodbyes
The 1968 season opens with a Malcolm Sargent Memorial Prom, in which Colin Davis conducts works by Vaughan Williams, William Walton and Elgar.
12 August 1968: Democracy in action
After a first half featuring Thea Musgrave’s Concerto for Orchestra, John Tavener’s Alium and Don Banks’s Violin Concerto, the audience is asked to vote for which work they would like to hear again after the interval. Alium wins by a landslide.
21 August 1968: Emotions in Czech
On 20 August, Soviet tanks rolled into Prague to put a stop to liberal reforms being carried out by the Czechoslovak leader Alexander Dubček – 137 civilians were killed as the world looked on in dismay. When the USSR State Orchestra and Russian cellist Mstislav Rostropovich took to the Albert Hall stage to play Dvořák’s Cello Concerto the next night, the occasion was highly charged and tinged with desperate irony.
‘That night will forever live in the memory of those of us who were there,’ recalls cellist Julian Lloyd Webber, who was 17 at the time. ‘Prague was a very important city in Rostropovich’s life – he met his wife Galina there – and here he was playing the Czech cello concerto. The tension was extraordinary, and while the performance was not his most technically perfect, towards the end it was utterly heartbreaking. When it came to the encore, he had tears rolling down his face.’
18 July 1969: Where’s the National Anthem?
Breaking with tradition, the Proms season does not open with the British National Anthem. Instead, conductor Colin Davis launches straight into Hector Berlioz’s Grande messe des morts in a Henry Wood Centenary Prom.
13 August 1969: Medieval melodies
As well as championing the new, Proms controller William Glock shows his willingness to push the boundaries at the other end of the timeline, as the Proms welcomes music from the 14th century: Machaut’s Messe de Nostre Dame, sung by the Ambrosian Singers.
28 August 1969: Is it over yet?
Some things go on too long. The 40-minute premiere of Worldes Blis, a motet for orchestra by Peter Maxwell Davies, has many audience members heading towards the bar well before the work is over. Others stick around to boo.
The 100 best Proms of all time – the 1970s
30 July 1970: You’re Early
Period performance pioneer David Munrow brings the Early Music Consort of London to the Proms for the first time.
13 August 1970: The Proms go rock
The music carries on well towards midnight as the BBC Symphony Orchestra is joined by rock band Soft Machine for the first ever Late Night Prom. An evening of premieres includes Mike Ratledge’s Out-Bloody-Rageous.
7 September 1972: The power of four
The Albert Hall Arena is cleared to make room for Karlheinz Stockhausen’s Carré for four orchestras. It is played once, and then again for good measure.
29 December 1972: Winter is coming?
Yes, you have read the date right. An all-Stravinsky concert launches an eight-day Winter Prom season, reviving a tradition abandoned earlier in the century. The revival only lasts a year.
4 January 1973: The big boys are in town
The mighty Berlin Philharmonic, one of the world’s greatest orchestras, makes its debut visit to the Proms, playing Beethoven’s Fourth and Fifth Symphonies under one of classical music’s true global stars, Herbert von Karajan.
26 July 1974: Let’s talk
As pre-Proms talks are introduced to the mix, the BBC Symphony Orchestra’s chief conductor (and composer) Pierre Boulez leads the way, giving five during the season, including one introducing this evening’s programme of Stockhausen, Berg and Wagner.
7 August 1974: Drama Burana
Crisis looms when baritone Thomas Allen collapses during Carl Orff’s Carmina Burana but – Oh, Fortuna! – budding opera singer Patrick McCarthy steps out from the audience to take over and save the day.
9 August 1976: Simon says…
The hair is here. Simon Rattle’s late night concert with the London Sinfonietta makes him, at 21, the youngest ever conductor at the Proms.
17 August 1977: Another big farewell
An 88-year-old Adrian Boult conducts his 251st and last Prom, rounding off with Vaughan Williams’s Job, a work that the composer himself had dedicated to him.
18 August 1979: Viennese whirl
Although the BBC Northern Symphony Orchestra’s ‘Viennese Night’ Prom is later watched by more than five million on TV, the BBC’s controller of music Robert Ponsonby decides not to repeat the format.
Memorable Proms: the 1980s
7 August 1980: The strike year
After a historic musicians’ strike has wiped out the first 19 Proms, the season gets off to a very belated start, with soprano Jessye Norman joining the BBC SO for Mahler’s Fourth.
16 and 18 July 1982: No TV please, we’re British
Pleas to Ponsonby for a TV-friendly First Night fall on deaf ears, and the new season opens instead with Berlioz’s The Trojans, divided between two Proms on Friday and Sunday. Neither are televised.
20 August 1984: Odaline breaks new ground
It took nearly 90 years since Henry Wood first flourished his Proms baton, but at last the conductor’s podium was filled by someone with two X chromosomes, with Odaline de la Martinez stepping up to lead her own Lontano ensemble in works by Schoenberg, Gerhard and others.
‘Do you realise that you are the first woman to conduct at the Albert Hall?’
‘I remember contacting the BBC and suggesting I do a programme there,’ de la Martinez later said in an interview. ‘They agreed, and it was only a few weeks before the performance that someone said to me, “Do you realise that you are the first woman to conduct a performance at the Albert Hall?” So I rang the BBC and they confirmed it!’
8 September 1984: Oh, Vienna
Symphonies by Mozart and Bruckner mark the Vienna Philharmonic’s first visit to the Proms, under Claudio Abbado.
15 September 1984: Joan Collins 1, classical music 0
The audience at the Last Night is invited to enjoy an extra-long interval so that TV viewers have time to watch Dynasty on BBC One before joining them for the second-half jollity at the Albert Hall.
14 September 1985: What to wear?
Last Night mezzo soloist Sarah Walker unbuttons the sleeve of her seemingly conventional white dress to reveal a Union Flag. A sartorial precedent is set.
24 July 1988: Take your time, Lenny
The great Leonard Bernstein is here to conduct his Songfest. The Prom’s kick-off time is 7.30pm. Bernstein arrives at the Albert Hall at 7.28pm. And relax…
The 100 best Proms of all time – the 1990s
15 September 1990: The Proms go political
Andrew Davis takes over the Last Night at late notice after intended conductor Mark Elder has been sent to the naughty step, sacked for questioning the suitability of singing patriotic songs in the light of the impending Gulf War.
10 August 1992: Drum roll
Performed by Evelyn Glennie, the world premiere of James MacMillan’s percussion concerto Veni, Veni, Emmanuel proves a major hit (excuse the pun).
18 July 1994: Britten for the Queen
At the age of 68, Queen Elizabeth II attends her first ever Prom. Her Majesty is treated to an all-British concert from the BBC Symphony Orchestra and Andrew Davis that includes Britten’s Violin Concerto, performed by Ida Haendel.
16 September 1995: Don’t Panic!
The popular narrative goes that John Drummond, the departing controller of the BBC Proms who was never a fan of the Last Night, plonked Harrison Birtwistle’s discordant Panic for saxophone and orchestra into the concert’s second half specifically to wind up the TV audience tuning in for Jerusalem and all. Very drôle if so… but not true.
Though countless calls of complaint were made to the BBC, that was not Drummond’s aim. Panic had in fact been intended for the first half but, as Birtwistle had composed a work nearly twice as long as commissioned and because it required large amounts of orchestral shifting beforehand, there was no choice but to put Panic at the start of the second.
22 July 1996: Chamber music to the fore
Lovers of music on a smaller scale head to the Royal College of Music on a Monday lunchtime as the new Chamber Music Proms series is launched with a performance by the Arditti Quartet. The series later finds a permanent home at nearby Cadogan Hall.
14 September 1996: Proms in the Park
Another Proms first, this time involving thousands of concert-goers and an open-air stage in Hyde Park. Hosted by Sheridan Morley, the debut Proms in the Park event on the Last Night proves such a success that it is soon extended to other cities across the UK.
10 August 1997: Solo, so high
The Russian pianist Evgeny Kissin makes history by giving the first ever solo recital at the Proms. The seven encores that follow may well be a Proms record too…
17 August 1997: Warm regards
Westminster Abbey choristers in cassocks and ruffs, processing into the Royal Albert Hall and singing Britten’s A Ceremony of Carols on a swelteringly hot August afternoon? Absolutely.
12 September 1997: In memoriam
A moving performance of Verdi’s Requiem is dedicated to the memories of Princess Diana and conductor Georg Solti. Tragically, Solti was himself initially scheduled to conduct the concert, but died the day before Diana’s funeral. Five minutes of silence follows the performance before applause begins.
10 August 1998: A strange interruption
Simon Rattle and the Birmingham Contemporary Music Group’s Late Night Prom is brought rudely to a halt by the sound of rape alarms and leaflets fluttering down from up high in the Albert Hall. The perpetrators, who are protesting against what they believe is a cabal running British music publishing, disappear anonymously into the night.
7 September 1998: Here’s one we made earlier
Presented by Katy Hill, the first Blue Peter Prom marks the 40th anniversary of the much loved children’s programme.
10 August 1999: Conga time
And… one, two, three, kick! One, two, three, kick! The Proms premiere of Bernstein’s Wonderful Town, starring American baritone Thomas Hampson, ends with Prommers doing a conga around the Arena.
Memorable Proms: the 2000s
15 September 2001: Barber replaces Britannia
Perfected by the likes of Malcolm Sargent and Andrew Davis, the conductor’s Last Night speech usually provides the chance to indulge in a few witticisms and rouse the Prommers into a state of even greater patriotic excitement. For Leonard Slatkin in 2001, the task was very different. Coming just four days after the 9/11 terrorist attacks, the occasion required a change of tone, not just in the speech but in the choice of music too.
Out went those patriotic mainstays ‘Land of Hope and Glory’ and ‘Rule Britannia’. In came Samuel Barber’s elegiac Adagio for Strings, Negro Spirituals from Tippett’s A Child of Our Time and the final movement of Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony. ‘We felt it was vital to respond to people’s mood at this sombre and difficult hour,’ explained Proms controller Nicholas Kenyon, ‘and at the same time to show that music can affirm our shared humanity.’
19 July 2003: Your vote counts
Readers of the Radio Times are invited to vote for the repertoire of the Nation’s Favourite Prom. The winning works include Prokofiev’s Peter and the Wolf, read here by Sir David Attenborough.
31 August 2003: Phones off, please
For some concert-goers, learning how to turn off a mobile phone is an intellectual challenge too far, as Simon Rattle discovers at the beginning of Stravinsky’s The Rite of Spring. He stops the Berlin Philharmonic mid-bar, and starts the piece again.
16 July 2004: A mighty organ
After two years of silence during a major revamp, the mighty Albert Hall organ is ready to play again. And how. The 2004 season opens with the thunderous sound of Bach’s Toccata in D minor, played by Martin Neary, before the BBC Symphony Orchestra takes over for the Fugue, as orchestrated by Henry Wood.
3 August 2005: Like father, like daughter
A family moment, as sitar players/composers Ravi Shankar and his daughter Anoushka perform together in a concert that includes the Proms premiere of Shankar Snr’s Sitar Concerto No. 1.
19 July 2006: Happy Birthday, Your Maj
Her Majesty the Queen makes a return visit to the Proms, this time for an 80th-birthday celebration. Among the works are A Little Birthday Music by Master of the Queen’s Music Peter Maxwell Davies and Poet Laureate Andrew Motion.
2 August 2006: More Pomp, more Circumstance
Elgar’s Pomp and Circumstance March No. 6, a work created by Anthony Payne from the composer’s incomplete sketches, is given its world premiere.
4 September 2006: Phoenix from the ashes
After their Beethoven Ninth Symphony Prom has been cancelled by a fire in the Albert Hall, the Philadelphia Orchestra and Christoph Eschenbach come back the next day for a second go, this time playing Beethoven’s and Tchaikovsky’s Fifths.
19 August 2007: London goes Venezuelan
The Albert Hall stage becomes a vibrant sea of yellow, blue and red, as Venezuela’s Simón Bolívar Youth Orchestra makes its lively Proms debut under conductor Gustavo Dudamel.
27 July 2008: Exterminate!! Exterminate!!
Daleks come face to face with double basses at the inaugural Doctor Who Prom. Thankfully, no viola players or trombonists are exterminated.
The 100 best Proms of all time – 2010 to the present
30 July 2011: Horrible Histories
No sooner have the daleks been repelled than the Albert Hall is invaded by Vikings, courtesy of the Horrible Histories Prom. There are also visits from Henry VIII, a caveman and Death, among others.
1 September 2011: Middle East tensions play a part
Though the concert itself goes ahead, protests by the pro-Palestinian group BDS London lead to the Israel Philharmonic’s Prom being taken off air.
13 July 2012: A little something from us
BBC Music Magazine plays its own little part in Proms history, as the 2012 season opens with Mark-Anthony Turnage’s Canon Fever, a work commissioned by the magazine’s editorial team.
27 July 2012: Double-date Daniel
Daniel Barenboim conducts the history-making West-Eastern Divan Orchestra (comprised of Israeli, Palestinian and other Middle East musicians) in Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony before haring off and across the city to appear as one of the Olympic flag bearers at the Opening Ceremony of London 2012.
22 July 2013: Give us a Ring
From Olympic rings to Wagnerian ones – Barenboim returns to the Proms to conduct Das Rheingold, the first of the four operas that make up Wagner’s epic Ring Cycle. He follows up with the rest of the cycle (Die Walküre, Siegfried and Götterdämmerung) in three further concerts over six days.
7 September 2013: Marin makes history
Marin Alsop is the first woman to conduct the Last Night of the Proms. ‘I feel certain that Henry Wood would see this evening as a natural progression towards more inclusion in classical music,’ says the American in her speech.
10 August 2014: Fifty years of Neville
As he steps onto the podium to conduct the Academy of St Martin in the Fields in Walton’s Henry V: A Shakespeare Scenario, Neville Marriner becomes, at 90, the oldest conductor in the history of the Proms. Marriner appeared in his first Prom, as a violinist, in 1963.
29 July 2015: It’s all gone Pete Tong
Radio 1 DJ Pete Tong hosts a late-night Ibiza Prom, bringing the Balearics party vibe to South Kensington.
5 August 2016: Encore!
In one of the great Proms encores, violinist Pekka Kuusisto marks his debut by getting the audience to join him and BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra leader Laura Samuel for a Finnish folk sing-along.
21 July 2019: Destination Moon
The Sunday morning CBeebies: A Musical Trip to the Moon Prom includes Earth, a specially commissioned work by Oscar-winning composer Hans Zimmer, no less.
28 August 2020: Nobody home
In years to come, the date will tell its own story – a Proms season beginning at the end of August, with just two weeks of concerts to follow. Audience figures for that season – zero – will also reveal that the UK was still in the grip of Covid. With no one in the seats or the Arena to applaud, the orchestral players did their best to fill the void by clapping the soloists, but it was a sorry sound.
Tasked with conducting this strangest of First Nights, Sakari Oramo said he would treat the occasion as if he and the BBC Symphony Orchestra were in the recording studio. Together, they performed works that included, in the composer’s 250th-anniversary year, Beethoven’s ‘Eroica’ Symphony.
30 July 2021: Getting back to normal
Though the season is slightly shorter than usual and a certain level of social distancing is still in place, the Proms returns to something close to normality. The Ukraine-born Finn Dalia Stasevska, who conducted the previous season’s Last Night to an empty hall, is immediately called back to begin this year’s festivities.
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