By BBC Music Magazine

Published: Friday, 15 July 2022 at 12:00 am


The BBC Proms are renowned for commissioning and performing new pieces every year – some by already well-established and acclaimed composers; others by exciting new talent. Either way, they represent an exciting chance to hear some works at the start of their performing history.

BBC Proms premieres 2022

Works that have never been performed before, many of which have been commissioned by or in collaboration with the BBC Proms

Sally Beamish: Hive (BBC co-commission; world premiere)

21 July (Prom 9)

One of the most approachable of English composers, Sally Beamish (b1956) has written this major orchestral work – lasting about 23 minutes – as a vehicle for harpist Catrin Finch, who will perform with the BBC National Orchestra of Wales conducted by Ariane Matiakh. It was music’s power to tell a story, as revealed by Malcolm Arnold’s Tam O’Shanter, which first inspired Beamish to become a composer. The new piece Hive, said by the composer to ‘depict the dramatic life of a beehive over the year’, naturally includes ‘the sounds of bees and birdsong’.

Cheryl Frances-Hoad: Your Servant, Elizabeth (BBC commission; world premiere)

22 July (Prom 10)

Specially commissioned to celebrate Elizabeth II’s Platinum Jubilee, Cheryl Frances-Hoad (b1980) has set out to write a piece that will make all sorts of connections: with music written for Queen Elizabeth I over 400 years ago – most particularly that by William Byrd; and, most importantly – says Frances-Hoad – with ‘everyone, from the performers to those watching on the telly at home, in a dignified yet joyful and glorious musical tribute to our longest reigning monarch.’ The programme, performed by the BBC Singers and the BBC Concert Orchestra conducted by Barry Wordsworth, also includes music by the present Master of the Queen’s Music, Judith Weir.

Jennifer Walshe: The Site of an Investigation (London premiere)

28 July (Prom 17)

Dublin-born Jennifer Walshe (b1974) is a former student of fellow Dubliner Kevin Volans. She also pursued composition studies at the Royal Scottish Academy of Music and Drama, and twenty years ago took her PhD in composition at Northwestern University, Illinois. She has also held positions in Germany, where she has received many commissions.

Composed in 2018, The Site of an Investigation for symphony orchestra and amplified solo voice was premiered in Dublin the following year. Addressing contemporary events and issues as she then saw them – ‘the climate emergency, precarity, Mars exploration, AI’ – it was also completed shortly after the death of her friend, the actor Stephen Swift: the work is dedicated to his memory. A lot has happened since, most notably the pandemic and its effects. Yet it remains a timely piece, and should make a strong impression with conductor Ilan Volkov conducting the BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra and the composer herself delivering its spoken text.

You may see its 2019 Dublin premiere here: