Exactly rauschwerk, its actually a very typical woger proms. There is a nod to the olympics in that in celebration of the eyes of the world being on London we do the Great Exhibition style big choral works (actually I was half expecting this to happen). There are the usual carrots to try to keep the British music fans off his back, whilst carefully continuing to avoid certain British composers or certain categories of works by British composers. Baroque, Classical and Early Romantic fare is totally dominiated by the big names with standard repetoire and there is a heavy concentration as usual on the period 1870-1920. The period 1920-80 is largely kept to a minimum except in relation to the odd popular classic or work by one of Woger's favoured composers of the period, composers he does not favour are largely kept out, there is the collection of more avant-garde compositions to keep these enthusiasts off his back and the usual collection of Proms commissions which are normally forgettable and will rarely be heard again.
Anniversary composers are normally the obvious ones, there is the occasional 'lip-service' piece to the less obvious ones or they snubbed altogether. Scadinavian music is normally almost exclusively confined to the 'big three' with the occasional more recent work, the same is true of Russian music post 1920, and American music is of the same period is kept to popular classics a bit of avant-garde or a favoured composer (normally John Adams). The continual virtual ignoral of a group of 20th century composers like Hindemith, Martinu, Honegger, Milhaud, Roussel for example.
The proms should be an opportunity to experiment with a whole range of composers contrasting well known works and composers of all periods with the lesser known ones.
When it was announced recently where, roughly, the BBC cuts would be made, both Radio 4 and the Proms were spared. I'm not entirely sure, as a certain amount of the vaunted 'transparency and openness' is absent, but I think that R4's budget is not being cut, whereas there will be any 'reinvestment' (what dat?) in the Proms necessary to 'preserve quality'. We queried in our response to the Trust's consultation where the reinvestment would come from, whether extra funds would be made available or whether it would come - like most of the Proms shortfall - from R3's budget, which would have implications for the rest of the station output, since the overall budget is being cut.
We also said that there would be absolutely no reduction in quality if the Proms did not expand each year, and that a cut in the number of events would be perfectly allowable in hard times. (The submissions will be up on the Trust's website soon, but haven't yet appeared)
Hmm. There have been three - three - works by Luigi Nono performed at the Proms, the most recent being in 1986. There hasn't been a single work by Helmut Lachenmann performed at the Proms. There has been one work by Salvatore Sciarrino performed at the Proms (1989). Which would suggest, among other things, an over-reliance on this year's featured 'avant-garde' great, Pierre Boulez, to do the BBC's thinking for them in such matters. That's just three very important composers (to put it as neutrally as possible. I'd say great composers, but hey ho); the iceberg is, as it were, sizable in its non-presence.
Well, I'm happy!![]()