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Published: Thursday, 07 November 2024 at 13:01 PM


If online travel forums and social media feeds are any indication, it’s not uncommon for travellers to visit a concert hall without ever attending an actual performance. Rather, they join in guided tours that focus on architecture and acoustics, performance history and personalities. Yet claims to take visitors ‘behind the scenes’ can vary, and some venues carefully edit their history. So what do you really get? I decided to road test five of the best backstage tours of concert halls around the world to find out just that…

The best backstage tours of concert halls around the world

Royal Albert Hall Tour, London

The Royal Albert Hall offers both backstage tours, which take in dressing rooms and underground loading bay, and a front-of-house survey, which I joined. Our guide, a whimsical, slightly Willy Wonka-like man, seemed intent on showing that the 153-year-old arena offers much more than classical fare, as we lingered before historic photos of boxing and tennis matches, circuses, politicians, authors and pop spectacles (each visitor was also given a handheld tablet featuring additional pictures). 

The royal box at the Royal Albert Hall

The tour moved to the Royal Box, affording an up-close view of 20 red velvet seats, which the family’s staff are invited to use when the sovereigns themselves have other plans. We stopped in the Royal Retiring Room, a faded lounge lined with family portraits (and soon to receive a makeover). A sizeable chunk of the tour covered namesake Prince Albert, who is memorialised with a lobby portrait and 15,000 letter As adorning the staircase railings and other nooks.

When funds ran short in the 1860s, the hall planners sold £100 seats to donors, each with 999-year leases – meaning that some boxes have remained in families ever since. Unmentioned was that some seat holders sell their unwanted tickets at inflated prices, a practice that has sparked criticism and scrutiny in the House of Lords.

Royal Albert Hall royal box
The Royal Albert Hall’s royal box, seen from the front. Pic: Chris Jackson/AFP via Getty Images – Chris Jackson/AFP via Getty Images

Later, we learned how rock concerts were banned for a period in the 1970s, as rowdy audiences nearly caused several ceilings to collapse, and how Pink Floyd in particular were put on the ‘do not book’ list for neglecting to inform hall management about an on-stage fireworks display.

A visit to the fifth-floor gallery, meanwhile, included a brief discussion of the fibreglass acoustic diffusers – the famous ‘mushrooms’ – and the once-problematic glass dome. Apart from a brief stop at the donors’ wall, the tour was free of commercial agendas, and an ongoing soundcheck provided the ambience of a working venue as we made our way round.