LONDON: The London-based Proms are celebrating their 120th year and the world’s biggest classical music festival continues to draw in crowds by mixing top performers with accessible ticket prices.
Star soloists and concert-goers alike hail the atmosphere at the BBC Promenade Concerts, with their quirks, traditions and sense of occasion.
Staged at the 5,500-capacity Royal Albert Hall, the circular, domed 1870s Italianate masterpiece in London, the eight-week series of concerts are firmly entrenched in the British cultural landscape.
Part of their charm is the tradition of “Promming“: turning up on the day for the 1,350 standing places costing £5 ($7.80, seven euros).
“Prommers” can therefore watch from right in front of the orchestra.
“The good thing is that the best position in the house is the cheapest,” Lord of the Rings actor Ian McKellen told AFP after a performance of interludes from Benjamin Britten’s “Peter Grimes.”
“Five pounds, compared to 60 pounds where the Queen sits,” he said, pointing to the boxes at the back. “It’s a whole reversal of the norm.”
Promming veterans and first-timers alike form an orderly queue for the standing tickets.
“I saw the Proms as a child on television so I’m quite excited to be here,” said Leanne Schmidt, from Yorkshire in northern England.
Daniela Cechova, a psychologist from Slovakia’s capital Bratislava, brought her 15-year-old daughter Nela.
“I wanted my daughter to experience the same experience I did 15 years ago. I came three times in five days. It was breathtaking. The music and the building are fantastic,” she said.
Christian Holt, a Londoner, has been promming around 20 times, drawn by the “variety and quality” of the concerts, plus the cheap tickets on the day of the concerts.
He said: “The acoustics are OK. I’ve heard better. That’s the one thing I’m not massively keen on.”
Naik Lashermes, 30, a Frenchwoman living in London, has gone Promming a dozen times in five years.
“It’s the quality of the musicians, plus the fact that it’s virtually for free. It’s the ambience of a festival in the world of classical music,” she said.
The red-upholstered hall rises 41 meters from the arena floor, through the stalls, three tiers of boxes, a circle and then the standing gallery at the top. The stage thrusts out into the arena.
Some Prom-goers go straight from work with their briefcases, some don cocktail dresses for the occasion, while others wear t-shirts and baseball caps.
Some stand arms folded, soaking in the music, while the more romantic types put arms around their partners.
People of all ages and nationalities make up the audience, while latecomers are not admitted until an interval.
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