Wagner at the Proms remembered

TAD AT 5 AT THE PROMS: WAGNER 2013 REMEMBERED Five singers, three conductors and a director look back on a collective triumph of the bicentenary year

Five singers, three conductors and a director look back on a collective triumph of the bicentenary year

This summer, the Royal Albert Hall became the centre of the Wagnerian universe. No one was going to ignore Bayreuth, where Frank Castorf‘s new Ring gave plenty of fuel for column inches; but somehow the singers and the orchestra seem to have got lost there among all the apparently uninterpretable stage paraphernalia. Here there was a unique context for the personenregie, the crucial relationships highlighted in Wagner’s many one-to-ones, as memorable as the spotlight on the music.

Prom 74: Sonnleitner, Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra, Maazel

Bruckner's Eighth resonates through the Albert Hall, despite a below par Vienna Philharmonic

Tradition used to decree that the last Friday Prom would be devoted to worshipping Beethoven’s Choral Symphony. Not so today. Anything deemed serious and big occupies the slot, and if Bruckner’s Eighth Symphony isn’t serious and big, what do you want? A 40-tonne truck?

theartsdesk Q&A: Mezzo-Soprano Joyce DiDonato

THEARTSDESK Q&A: MEZZO-SOPRANO JOYCE DIDONATO The First Lady of the Last Night of the Proms in conversation

The First Lady of the Last Night of the Proms discusses Donizetti and her new disc

She’s the Kansas mezzo-soprano whose ruby slippers have now taken her across the globe, singing in all the great opera houses, but who has never lost the common touch. She’s not a diva, she’s a “Yankee Diva” – a contemporary creature who would never dream of throwing a tantrum or cancelling at short notice. She's Joyce DiDonato.

Prom 73: Imogen Cooper, Paul Lewis

PROM 73: IMOGEN COOPER, PAUL LEWIS A Schubert masterpiece duly plumbed precedes a dainty, long and slightly disappointing duo

A Schubert masterpiece duly plumbed precedes a dainty, long and slightly disappointing duo

It’s not because I lament the annual end of a love-hate relationship with the Albert Hall that the last few days of Proms feel rather melancholy. A bittersweetness lies rather in the drawing-in of evenings, however hot it is, so late night Schubert for one and then two pianos seemed like an appropriately introspective way of saying farewell this year.

Prom 72: Calleja, Orchestra Sinfonica di Milano Giuseppe Verdi, Zhang

Lack of engagement from the Maltese tenor and shabby Tchaikovsky from the Italians

It was too little too late to redress the scant attention gives to Verdi’s bicentenary at this year’s Proms but the “Maltese Tenor” – Joseph Calleja – arrived with an eleventh hour offering of low-key Verdi arias and joining him was the Milanese orchestra bearing the composer’s name. Calleja’s growing legions of fans were much in evidence, of course, more Maltese than Italian flags, but what can they have made of the music stand which came between them and their hero?

10 Questions for Conductor Marin Alsop

TAD AT 5 AT THE PROMS: MARIN ALSOP ON THE LAST NIGHT 2013 The first female conductor of the annual closing ritual speaks out about gender

The first female conductor of the Last Night of the Proms speaks out about gender

Marin Alsop may be one of America’s leading conductors, with stints as music director of the Colorado, Eugene and Richmond symphony orchestras, not to mention positions at the Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra, Royal Scottish National Orchestra, City of London Sinfonia, and of course her current roles at the head of the Baltimore and São Paulo State Symphony orchestras, but apparently none of that is as important as the fact that she’s a woman.

Prom 70: BBC Singers, Temple Church Choir, Hill

A choral salute to centenarians Britten and George Lloyd, half good, half curious

Purity and holiness filled the air. Boy choristers in red cassocks filed onto the platform. The BBC announcer, paraded soon after, promised “choral music to carry us into the after life”. Had I come to the right place? Was I attending my own funeral service? 

Prom 69: Hadland, Oslo Philharmonic Orchestra, Petrenko

PROM 69: HADLAND, OSLO PHILHARMONIC ORCHESTRA, PETRENKO Pearly early Beethoven projects effortlessly, but trickiest Bruckner proves boggy as usual

Pearly early Beethoven projects effortlessly, but trickiest Bruckner proves boggy as usual

May I be permitted a rude, opinionated intermezzo between reflections on Vasily Petrenko’s two Oslo Philharmonic Proms, and before Marin Alsop steps up to great expectations for the Last Night?

Prom 68: Skride, Oslo Philharmonic Orchestra, Petrenko

Haunting nocturnes and crisp winter landscapes from the Norwegians under their new Russian chief conductor

The Oslo Philharmonic Orchestra made quite a splash with their Tchaikovsky symphony series under Mariss Jansons back in the 1980s. The watchwords then were freshness and articulation, a re-establishment of Tchaikovsky’s innate classicism - and so it was again as Vasily Petrenko stepped out as the orchestra’s new Chief Conductor. The opening of Tchaikovsky’s First Symphony sounded so light and articulate, so suggestive of clean, icy cold air, and the clarity that brings that the subtitle “Winter Daydreams” suddenly seemed a little vague.

Prom 62: A Celebration of Charlie Parker

PROM 62: A CELEBRATION OF CHARLIE PARKER Django Bates pays late-night homage to a jazz legend

Django Bates pays late-night homage to a jazz legend

Pianist, composer, and band leader Django Bates was so inspired by Charlie Parker as a teenager that he used to whistle his tunes on the train. This led not to abuse, but the acquaintance (at Brixton station) of saxophonist Steve Buckley. Returning to the Proms this week for the first time since his 1987 debut with Loose Tubes, Bates paid homage with a set of mainly Parker adaptations, performed by his trio, Beloved, in a new collaboration with the Swedish Norrbotten Big Band.