Say the phrase "BBC Proms Concert" to most music lovers, and they'll probably conjure up a mental image of the rowdy "Last Night of the Proms"—an event at which normally staid and reserved Britons don funny hats and make rude noises during Sir Henry Wood's arrangement of British sailor songs.
But the raucous "Last Night of the Proms" is only the festive finale of several weeks of fairly serious music making: dozens of concerts covering a wide range of old and new music
From the very beginning of the Proms in 1895, Sir Henry, who started the whole thing, had this specific agenda: "I am going to run nightly concerts to train the public in easy stages," he explained. "Popular at first, gradually raising the standard until I have created a public for classical AND modern music."
On today's date in 1996, for example, violinist Gidon Kremer premiered this
brand-new violin concerto by the Finnish composer Kaija Saariaho at a BBC Proms concert. The new concerto had an unusual title—"Grail Theater."
"I like the unusual combination of these two words," explained Saariaho, "because it represents two such different things. One is the search for the Grail, and the other side is the theatrical aspect. I feel that the concerto situation is very much comparable to a theater, and the main person in this theater piece is the violin."