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Editorial
Board
London Editor:
(London UK)
Melanie
Eskenazi
Regional Editor:
(UK regions and Worldwide)
Bill
Kenny
Webmaster:
Bill
Kenny
Music Web Webmaster:
Len
Mullenger
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Seen
and Heard Festival Preview
BBC Promenade Concerts 2007:
A preview from London Editor Melanie Eskenazi.
‘The Greatest Music Festival in the
World’ - ‘Well, the Proms isn’t really
a proper FESTIVAL, is it…? ‘
‘It’s excellent, this year – loads of
vocal music, plenty of English music…’
‘A disgrace - hardly any Mahler, no
real English music to speak of. .and
as for having Michael Ball…’
And so it goes on - of all the Music
Festivals I know, the Proms always
inspires the most excitement and
debate: I receive the glossy brochures
from Salzburg and Schwarzenberg,
Glyndebourne and Glimmerglass with
great pleasure, and set them aside for
leisurely perusal, perhaps later that
day – but the Proms brochure is the
one I eagerly tear open and rush
through, gleefully ticking off the
concerts I want to hear - and then, of
course, moderating that pleasure with
my editor’s hat on, realizing that the
most delectable ones will be fought
over by at least five of my
colleagues.
Of course the Proms is a ‘proper’
Festival - those who say it’s not are
usually the same people who tell you
that anything on the Internet is not
‘proper’ journalism(as though there
were some ‘qualification’ such as a
degree in Music or perhaps English...
hang on a minute, though, I believe my
eight colleagues and I have about
thirteen of those between us) and who
have missed the fact that of all the
resources on ‘The Opera Critic,’ it is
not a daily tabloid or broadsheet
which is the most read, but ‘Seen &
Heard’ - of course no one confuses
frequency or volume with excellence,
but if a review is not worth reading,
then I don’t go back to that site or
newspaper - and our readers appear to
come back again and again, as indeed I
do to the Proms: egalitarian,
sometimes an endurance test (The heat!
The noisy Prommers! The noisy Critics!
The daft system in the Café!) it is
everything a Festival should be - a
celebration of Music in all its
diversity, held in glorious
surroundings.
So, what are this year’s ‘top picks?’
This 113th season is the 80th
anniversary of the partnership between
the Proms and the BBC, so celebration
is in the air with many concerts
commemorating Premieres: works by
Walton and
Frank
Bridge feature in the First Night and
the first Cadogan Hall Matinee, and
first-performed-here works continue
with pieces by Britten, Strauss and
Martinů. BBC commissioning is marked
with works by Hans Werner Henze
(including the UK premiere of
Sebastian im Traum on August 17th)
and Arvo Pärt, and Mark Elder conducts
Shostakovich’s 7th Symphony
on August 4th,
commemorating one of the most famous
of the wartime Proms premieres, given
just two months after the score had
been smuggled out of the Soviet Union.
This is a big year for ‘Themes,’ and
they are all enticing ones –
‘Shakespeare and Music’ covers 25
concerts, with works as diverse as
Verdi’s Macbeth, from
Glyndebourne Opera on July 24th,
and settings of the Songs by Elizabeth
Maconchy (Philip Langridge at Cadogan
Hall on August 13th) and by
Arne (Mark Padmore, August 18th)
- ‘Auden and Blake’ is an equally
appealing theme, including many works
by Britten (the ‘Serenade’ on
September 1st, ‘Our Hunting
Fathers’ on July 27th,
Chorales sung by Polyphony on July 30th).
This year also commemorates the 150th
anniversary of the birth of Elgar and
the 50th of the death of
Sibelius, with both composers finely
reflected in very high-calibre
concerts including Elgar’s ‘Cello
Concerto on the First Night (Paul
Watkins, July 13th) the
‘Enigma’ Variations with the RPO under
Daniele Gatti on August 5th
and The Apostles on August 18th
with a stellar cast: Sibelius is
highlighted in a programme entirely
devoted to his works on August 15th
(Osmo Vänskä), his 2nd
Symphony by the under-rated Bavarian
Radio Symphony Orchestra under one of
my favourite conductors, Mariss
Jansons on August 29th, and
a showing of Christopher Nupen’s
wonderful pair of films about the
composer, introduced by the director
on August 11th.
So, what are my own top choices? This
year, Family Reunions mean that I
shall be in Texas and the Caribbean
for part of the Proms, so I will miss
what would have been the obvious
selections for anyone with my tastes -
Renée Fleming singing Berg and
Korngold on August 6th, a
superb Bach programme by the Bach
Collegium Japan under Masaaki Suzuki
on the 7th, a concert
performance of Götterdämmerung
with Christine Brewer and John
Tomlinson on the 12th, and
Matthias Goerne’s Proms debut on the
13th, in a selection from
Das Knaben Wunderhorn. No
matter - there is a great deal else
to entice me to the Royal Albert Hall
this season, and my colleagues will
have one less person to fight off for
those delectable vocal highlights.
Melanie Eskenazi
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Seen and Heard, one of the longest established live
music review web sites on the Internet, publishes original reviews
of recitals, concerts and opera performances from the UK and internationally.
We update often, and sometimes daily, to bring you fast reviews,
each of which offers a breadth of knowledge and attention to performance
detail that is sometimes difficult for readers to find elsewhere.
Seen and Heard
publishes interviews with musicians, musicologists and directors
which feature both established artists and lesser known performers.
We also feature articles on the classical music industry and we
use other arts media to connect between music and culture in its
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Seen and Heard
aims to present the best in new criticism from writers with a radical
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Editor Bill Kenny. |
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Contributors: Marc
Bridle, Martin Anderson, Patrick Burnson, Frank Cadenhead, Colin
Clarke, Paul Conway, Geoff Diggines, Sarah Dunlop, Evan Dickerson
Melanie Eskenazi (London Editor) Robert J Farr, Abigail Frymann,
Göran Forsling, Simon Hewitt-Jones, Bruce Hodges,Tim Hodgkinson,
Martin Hoyle, Bernard Jacobson, Tristan Jakob-Hoff, Ben Killeen,
Bill Kenny (Regional Editor), Ian Lace, John Leeman, Sue Loder,Jean
Martin, Neil McGowan, Bettina Mara, Robin Mitchell-Boyask, Simon
Morgan, Aline Nassif, Anne Ozorio, Ian Pace, John Phillips,
Jim Pritchard, John Quinn, Peter Quantrill, Alex Russell, Paul
Serotsky, Harvey Steiman, Christopher Thomas, Raymond Walker, John Warnaby,
Hans-Theodor Wolhfahrt, Peter Grahame Woolf (Founder & Emeritus
Editor)
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Site design: Bill Kenny
2004 |