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Classical 18/04/2019

Unveiling The 2019 BBC Proms Friday 19 July - Saturday 14 September 2019

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Unveiling The 2019 BBC Proms Friday 19 July - Saturday 14 September 2019
New York, NY (Top40 Charts) Marking the 150th birthday of founder-conductor Sir Henry Wood, the BBC Proms continues to fulfil his mission to bring 'the best of classical music to the widest possible audience'
Fifty years after Apollo 11 landed on the Moon, the Proms ponders how composers across the centuries have imagined and created the sound of space.

In the hope of inspiring young minds, three major new works in concerts for families reflect the changing world around us and highlight the topical debate about the future of our planet.
From afropop to jazz, hip hop to pizzica, and electronica to meditative listening, this year's Proms is a truly eclectic festival

Up to 1,400 promming tickets will be available for £6 for every Prom and 100,000 tickets will be available for £15 and under

As ever, BBC Radio 3 will broadcast every single note, BBC Sounds will give audiences ready access to the Proms, and there will be 25 Proms on TV this season
Remaining faithful to Wood's mission to 'bring the best of classical music to the widest possible audience', the Proms offers a wealth of genres and styles in a range of contexts. Whether it's Murray Perahia performing Beethoven's 4th Piano Concerto with the Vienna Philharmonic under Bernard Haitink or a Prom dedicated to the genius of Nina Simone with Ledisi and Jules Buckley, the quality and range of what's on offer showcases the very best of music.

Henry Wood was arguably one of the world's first audience developers, committed to increasing access to the arts. The Proms' proudest tradition is that of daily promming (standing) tickets - a Henry Wood innovation to reach the broadest audience possible. This marks the fourth year that up to 1,400 promming tickets will be available for £6 for every Prom. And, to further mark the promming tradition, a special Proms At... Battersea Arts Centre will see all tickets for the event priced at £6. Over at the Royal Albert Hall, 100,000 tickets will be available for £15 and under.

As an educationalist, conductor and champion of young people, Henry Wood provided countless opportunities for aspiring young artists to get involved in classical music; it's a proud tradition that the Proms continues to reflect today. This season celebrates the 20th anniversary of BBC Radio 3's New Generation Artists scheme, featuring 12 of its alumni. Elsewhere, other notable debuts take to the concert platform, including Leeds International Piano Competition winner Eric Lu and Lithuanian soprano Asmik Grigorian. Once again, BBC Proms Learning offers a diverse-range of creative opportunities beyond the concert platform. Initiatives such as BBC Proms Inspire for composers, Proms Youth Choir Academy, and the Proms Youth Ensemble will reach hundreds of young people this year.

At the church where he was buried, Proms At... Holy Sepulchre London will continue the celebration of Wood with a special concert from the BBC Singers under Chief Conductor Sofi Jeannin. The Proms At... Cadogan Hall series is underpinned by a historical journey through classical music, celebrating some of the most notable women composers of the past, from Hildegard of Bingen via Barbara Strozzi and Clara Schumann - both of whom have anniversaries this year - to the present day with a BBC commission from Freya Waley-Cohen. Offering a fresh take on the history of classical music through the eyes of women, each concert in this series will contain at least one work by a woman composer of the time.

From afropop to jazz, East Coast hip hop to South Italian pizzica, and electronica to meditative listening, this will be a truly eclectic celebration of the diversification of music. A Prom devoted to the music of singer, pianist, and social activist Nina Simone explores her background and enduring influence; and an exhilarating evening of dance, song and spectacle, Duke Ellington's Scared Music is presented in a Late Night Prom. From breakdancing to MC-ing and DJ-ing to graffiti art, The Breaks will honour the global phenomenon of hip hop and, in particular, breakbeat culture. The Late-Night Mixtape Prom will bring together an eclectic range of classical and contemporary sounds. Bringing the popular concept of a music-mix into a 'live' context, this Prom will feed into the experiential model that drives so much of music consumption today, where immersion and discovery is key.

Fifty years after Apollo 11 landed on the Moon, the Proms ponders how composers across the centuries have imagined and created the sound of space. The first work heard at the 2019 BBC Proms will be a BBC commission and world premiere from Zosha Di Castri, Long Is The Journey, Short Is The Memory, inspired by this monumental event. On the very day that marks the 50th anniversary of the Moon Landings, Holst's The Planets is complemented by John Adams's ever-popular Short Ride In A Fast Machine. The CBeebies Prom will offer families the chance to travel through time and space with some famous faces including Mr Tumble and Chris Jarvis, hosted by YolanDa Brown, featuring Chineke! Orchestra under Kwamé Ryan.

Other highlights in this strand include: the UK premiere of Anna Thorvalsdottir's Metacosmos - a musical metaphor for falling into a black hole - conveniently timed just three months after astronomers captured the first ever image of a black hole, as revealed last week. Public Service Broadcasting orchestrate their ground-breaking 2015 concept album The Race For Space, a mix of music and broadcast recordings portraying the tale of the US/Russian space race. In a Proms first, the Sci-Fi Film Music Prom features scores from cult space and sci-fi films, including Steve Price's Gravity and Mica Levi's Under The Skin, presented by the London Contemporary Orchestra under Robert Ames.

A number of concerts targeted specifically at families will use compelling story-telling to highlight topical debate. An exploration into our roles as guardians of our planet complements a study of the solar system. Alongside famous works inspired by the natural world, three new works highlight how music can be relevant to the times in which we live and, in this case, support the conversation around sustainability and protection of the planet. The Lost Words Prom, based on Robert McFarlane and Jackie Morris's popular book about the disappearing language of nature, will feature spoken word and beat-boxing. John Luther Adams's In The Name Of The Earth - a huge, landscape-inspired choral work - will feature four community choirs with over 600 singers. Finally, a brand new work by Hans Zimmer, Earth will receive its world premiere this year.

David Pickard, Director, BBC Proms, says: "The Proms in 2019 gives a snapshot of all that is most exciting in our musical world today. It is the chance to hear some of the most celebrated ensembles and artists from across the globe, a showcase for the vibrant orchestral life that exists in the UK, and a celebration of the diversity of contemporary music in the 21st century. All of this is underpinned by the proud tradition of promming which allows audiences to enjoy this vast range of music for just £6 per concert. As we celebrate 150 years since Henry Wood's birthday, the Proms continues to explore new ground whilst celebrating the founding principles of the festival - to bring the best of classical music to the widest possible audience."

The Proms has always been at the forefront of cultural and musical innovation, bringing the best new works to audiences. As a global visionary, Sir Henry Wood gave the world and British premieres of hundreds of works at the Proms including Stravinsky's The Firebird, Sibelius's Violin Concerto and Schoenberg's Five Pieces For Orchestra. This year, we celebrate 33 of the pieces that Wood introduced to UK audiences, alongside 33 new works for 2019.

New music highlights include Radiohead's Jonny Greenwood curating a Late Night Prom culminating in the world premiere of his Horror vacui. The piece simulates electronic sound using 68 string instruments played acoustically. Proms at... Battersea Arts Centre will showcase boundary-crossing and provocative composer-performers, featuring experiments at the cutting edge of music and technology with Jennifer Walshe, Crewsdon & Cevanne, and Oliver Coates. Elsewhere, Martyn Brabbins presents a 21st-century companion to Elgar's Enigma Variations 120 years on. Based on a new anonymously written theme, this work features variations by 14 living composers including Sally Beamish, Sir Harrison Birtwistle, Dai Fujikura and Judith Weir.

Henry Wood's Proms seasons were famous for nights dedicated to one composer. In celebration of that concept, the final week of the 2019 season replicates Wood's original programming: a Monday evening of Wagner, a Wednesday evening of Bach and a Friday evening of Beethoven. More than a century ago, these concerts were perhaps the first example of 'box-set binging'.

As part of a celebration of Berlioz at 150, Sir John Eliot Gardiner and the Orchestre Révolutionnaire et Romantique present the rarely performed opera Benvenuto Cellini and Nicholas Collon and Aurora Orchestra bring a dramatic treatment of Symphonie fantastique with actor Mathew Baynton. Other composer anniversaries include: Louis Andriessen at 80, Peter Eötvös at 75 and Sir James MacMillan at 60. A special focus on Weinberg, who would have been 100, includes his String Quartet No. 7 and the London premieres of his Cello Concerto and Symphony No. 3.

Once again, BBC Radio 3 enables the festival to reach millions each year by broadcasting every single note and, new for this year, audiences now have ready access to the Proms through the BBC Sounds app allowing them to engage with the festival anytime, anywhere. There are 25 Proms on TV for audiences to enjoy and the Proms magazine show returns to BBC Two on Saturday nights throughout the festival.

Alan Davey, Controller, BBC Radio 3, BBC Proms, BBC Orchestras and Choirs, says: "This year's Proms celebrates the legacy of Sir Henry Wood - whose avowed aim was for the greatest music to be heard by the widest possible audience - values that are lived by the Proms, by Radio 3 and by the BBC Orchestras and Choirs today. From outer space to the environment on Earth, from Perotin to Thorvaldsdottir via Duke Ellington, from new artists to those who are established, from chamber music to massed orchestral and choral forces, the Proms brings the best of music to an enormous audience in this country and beyond. Only the BBC can do this in such a bold and ambitious way. Long live the legacy of Sir Henry!"

Across more than 90 concerts over eight weeks, the Proms draws the world's greatest classical musicians to London. From Martha Argerich and Daniel Barenboim to Joyce DiDonato and Sir Antonio Pappano, the festival will amplify the work of today's most acclaimed artists. Mezzo-soprano Jamie Barton will feature at the world-famous Last Night Of The Proms, Sheku Kanneh-Mason will perform Elgar's Cello Concerto, and Nicola Benedetti and Pekka Kuusisto will contribute to a season-wide survey of well-loved and lesser-known violin concerti. Of particular note: in the bicentenary year of Queen Victoria's birth, Stephen Hough performs Mendelssohn's Piano Concerto No. 1 on her very own piano. Loaned from the Royal Collection by Her Majesty The Queen, this will be the first time the piano will be played outside Buckingham Palace. The programme also includes songs written by Prince Albert.

Once again, the BBC Orchestras and Choirs form the backbone of the BBC Proms, appearing in over a third of the concerts this summer. Newly appointed Chief Conductor Designate of the BBC Philharmonic Omer Meir Wellber and Principal Guest Conductor of the BBC Symphony Orchestra Dalia Stasevska both make their Proms debuts this summer, and Karina Canellakis becomes the first woman to conduct the First Night Of The Proms. Alongside the BBC Orchestras there is a wealth of international orchestras, from the Vienna Philharmonic with Bernard Haitink and Andrés Orozco-Estrada and the Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra with Mariss Jansons to the Shanghai Symphony Orchestra which makes its Proms debut in its 140th year under Long Yu.

Since it was first introduced in 2017, the Relaxed Prom has become one of the most popular events in the Proms calendar. This year it returns to offer a relaxed performance around core classical repertoire of Rachmaninov and Tchaikovsky. The Prom will be fully accessible to family members of all ages, children and adults with autism, sensory and communication impairments and learning disabilities, as well as individuals who are Deaf or hearing impaired, blind and partially sighted or living with dementia. Henry Wood's vision brought to life, this event is truly open to all.

Elsewhere at the BBC Proms
The BBC Proms offers audiences the chance to learn more about and get closer to the music through a series of over 70 pre-Prom events - free daily pre-concert talks, readings, workshops and participation events for all ages.

The Proms on radio
Every note of the BBC Proms will be broadcast live on BBC Radio 3 and available for 30 days online at bbc.co.uk/proms
With the BBC Sounds app, audiences can now listen to the Proms remotely, anytime, anywhere
As in previous years, selected concerts will be presented as a binaural audio stream, enabling radio listeners, using ordinary headphones, to experience the concerts as if they were present in the Royal Albert Hall
The Relaxed Prom will be an audio-described and British Sing Language-interpreted performance
Proms-themed special editions of In Tune, Record Review and Composer Of The Week will complement the season, alongside coverage of pre-Prom talks and events

The Proms on television
The BBC Proms on television are produced by Livewire Pictures and commissioned by BBC Music Television Head of Commissioning, Jan Younghusband
The televised Proms are scheduled to broadcast every weekend (Friday and Sunday) across the summer on BBC Four reflecting the full breadth of the season
The Proms magazine show, the weekly magazine show hosted by Katie Derham, returns for its seventh season, every Saturday evening on BBC Two
The First Night Of The Proms will be on BBC Two and BBC Four and the Last Night Of The Proms on BBC Two and BBC One.
The CBeebies Prom (Proms 3 & 5) will be recorded for future broadcast on CBeebies

Tickets are available online (bbc.co.uk/proms) or (020 7070 4441) and in person (Royal Albert Hall)
Season and weekend promming passes are available to purchase from 9am on Thursday 9 May
Proms Chamber Music Series passes are available to purchase from 9am on Thursday 9 May
Tickets for the CBeebies Prom (Proms 3 & 5), Relaxed Prom (Prom 24) and The Lost Words Prom (Prom 49), including a limited number of promming tickets, are available to purchase from 9am am on Friday 10 May
General booking opens at 9am on Saturday 11 May
Proms At... concerts (excluding the Proms Chamber Music Series at Cadogan Hall) are available to purchase from 9am on Friday 14 June
Booking opens for the Proms participatory events on 14 June via the Proms website






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