Prom 26: Serkin, BBC Symphony Orchestra, Knussen

PROM 26: SERKIN, BBC SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA, KNUSSEN Adventurous programming, a curate's egg as usual, from the laid back composer-conductor

Adventurous programming, a curate's egg as usual, from the laid back composer-conductor

You wait years for a live performance to test whether Tippett’s Second Symphony is a masterpiece, and then two come along within six months. Both are due to the missionary zeal of the BBC Symphony Orchestra management, determined to give an overshadowed English composer a voice in Britten centenary year. But while Martyn Brabbins convinced me totally of the Second’s dynamic journey back in April at the Barbican, Oliver Knussen caught its rarefied sounds but not always its progressive sense.

Prom 24: British Light Music

PROM 24: BRITISH LIGHT MUSIC A nostalgic evening of music that would have been better left in mothballs

A nostalgic evening of music that would have been better left in mothballs

Reviewing last night’s Prom of British Light Music feels a bit like getting all AA Gill on your granny’s Victoria sponge. The collage of musical morsels from Bantock, Arnold, Coates and Elgar is music made with love, for pleasure, by composers who rated enjoyment over admiration. It’s music that smothers critical appraisal gently but firmly in its tweed-clad bosom, killing you with musical kindness. It’s also music that needs Xenakis-like precision if it is to come off, and more pep even than that.

Prom 20: Götterdämmerung, Staatskapelle Berlin, Barenboim

TAD AT 5 AT THE PROMS: WAGNER'S RING 2013 Nina Stemme, this year's stupendous Salome, stuns as Brünnhilde and Daniel Barenboim achieves a defining moment in Proms history

Daniel Barenboim concludes his 'Ring', and achieves a defining moment in Proms history

And so Wotan’s ravens flew home and at the twilight’s last gleaming the immortals were consumed by fire and water. All was finally and irrevocably redeemed by the power of love, and the most beautiful of all the leitmotifs in Wagner’s Ring rolled out across the Albert Hall like a benediction. It was a defining moment in Proms history, no doubt, and was greeted with a few moments of perfect - and I mean perfect - silence.

Prom 19: Tristan und Isolde, BBC Symphony Orchestra, Bychkov

PROM 19: TRISTAN UND ISOLDE, BBC SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA, BYCHKOV The Russian conductor and a thoroughly rehearsed BBCSO capture every vivid moment of Wagner's score

The Russian conductor and a thoroughly rehearsed BBCSO capture every vivid moment of Wagner's score

Such has been the justifiable flow of superlatives this week about the Berlin Staatskapelle's Ring conducted by Barenboim, the centrepiece of the BBC Proms' Wagner bicentenary celebration, it would have been easy to forget that the 2013 Proms season contains not just those four, but seven complete Wagner operas.

Prom 15: Die Walküre, Staatskapelle Berlin, Barenboim

PROM 15: DIE WALKÜRE, STAATSKAPELLE BERLIN, BARENBOIM Anja Kampe is electrifying in a top line-up for Wagner's second Ring opera

Anja Kampe is electrifying in a top line-up for Wagner's second Ring opera

Things may be falling apart, a storm now rages but new broods of humans and demigoddesses have been fathered by chief god Wotan, who has undergone a Doctor Who like transformation from Iain Paterson into Bryn Terfel.

Prom 14: Das Rheingold, Staatskapelle Berlin, Barenboim

Vocally and orchestrally sumptuous fellowship of the ring kicks off colossal Wagnerfest

Swimming around in the Rhine is what most of us wanted to be doing on the hottest day of the year. A cooling, riverbed low E flat from Daniel Barenboim’s Berlin double basses, and then the staggered horn entries announced we were going to be in the finest sonic hands for two and a half hours  – or nearly 15, if the colossal Proms Ring is to be accounted in its full, four-night glory.

Prom 12: Accademia di Santa Cecilia Chorus and Orchestra, Pappano

Italian choral singing shines, but the Verdi rarities on offer don't approach the Requiem

It’s a dilemma of anniversary years, and never more so than with Wagner’s and Verdi’s 200th birthdays: do you stick to the masterpieces or try and bring the rarities to life? No-one would have minded, I suspect, if Antonio Pappano and the Accademia di Santa Cecilia forces he has raised to the level of one of the world’s great ensembles had reprised their peerless Verdi Requiem. It was unfortunate, then, if some of us sat with interest through unusual fare wishing for better alternatives in every case.

Swan Lake, English National Ballet, Royal Albert Hall

In-the-round means grids and drills: only superhuman performances can rescue the maths

So much is wrong with Derek Deane’s arena Swan Lake, as if he read a poem and rewrote it as a press release. If you want big fat images of swans, 60 white-feathered girls in precision-tooled lines, this is for you. Take your photos on your phone, take them home and say, “I was there.” If you want to feel the private passion of the story, surrender to the music and the peculiar fantasy, to examine your own motivations and ability to choose love, forget this - go elsewhere.

BBC Proms 2013: Ring operas for a fiver each

BBC PROMS 2013: RING OPERAS FOR A FIVER EACH The world's biggest music festival runs the gamut as ever, from Bach to Fazer, England to Azerbaijan

The world's biggest music festival runs the gamut as ever, from Bach to Fazer, England to Azerbaijan

First, the good news: you can see Wagner’s entire Ring at the Royal Albert Hall, with absolutely the world’s finest Wagner singers and conductor in concert, for a grand total of £20. The bad news is that unless you have a season ticket – in which case it works out even cheaper – you’ll probably have to queue for most of the day to guarantee a place in the Arena or Gallery, and then you’ll still need the energy to stand for up to five hours an evening.