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BBC Proms premieres: all the brand new works commissioned for the 2022 BBC Proms season


The BBC Proms are famend for commissioning and performing new items yearly – some by already well-established and acclaimed composers; others by thrilling new expertise. Both approach, they symbolize an thrilling probability to listen to some works firstly of their performing historical past.

BBC Proms premieres 2022

Works which have by no means been carried out earlier than, a lot of which have been commissioned by or in collaboration with the BBC Proms

Sally Beamish: Hive (BBC co-commission; world premiere)

21 July (Promenade 9)

One of the vital approachable of English composers, Sally Beamish (b1956) has written this main orchestral work – lasting about 23 minutes – as a car for harpist Catrin Finch, who will carry out with the BBC Nationwide Orchestra of Wales performed by Ariane Matiakh. It was music’s energy to inform a narrative, as revealed by Malcolm Arnold’s Tam O’Shanter, which first impressed Beamish to turn into a composer. The brand new piece Hive, mentioned by the composer to ‘depict the dramatic lifetime of a beehive over the yr’, naturally consists of ‘the sounds of bees and birdsong’.

Cheryl Frances-Hoad: Your Servant, Elizabeth (BBC fee; world premiere)

22 July (Promenade 10)

Specifically commissioned to have fun Elizabeth II’s Platinum Jubilee, Cheryl Frances-Hoad (b1980) has got down to write a chunk that can make all types of connections: with music written for Queen Elizabeth I over 400 years in the past – most notably that by William Byrd; and, most significantly – says Frances-Hoad – with ‘everybody, from the performers to these watching on the telly at house, in a dignified but joyful and wonderful musical tribute to our longest reigning monarch.’ The programme, carried out by the BBC Singers and the BBC Live performance Orchestra performed by Barry Wordsworth, additionally consists of music by the current Grasp of the Queen’s Music, Judith Weir.

Jennifer Walshe: The Website of an Investigation (London premiere)

28 July (Promenade 17)

Dublin-born Jennifer Walshe (b1974) is a former scholar of fellow Dubliner Kevin Volans. She additionally pursued composition research on the Royal Scottish Academy of Music and Drama, and twenty years in the past took her PhD in composition at Northwestern College, Illinois. She has additionally held positions in Germany, the place she has obtained many commissions.

Composed in 2018, The Website of an Investigation for symphony orchestra and amplified solo voice was premiered in Dublin the next yr. Addressing modern occasions and points as she then noticed them – ‘the local weather emergency, precarity, Mars exploration, AI’ – it was additionally accomplished shortly after the loss of life of her good friend, the actor Stephen Swift: the work is devoted to his reminiscence. Rather a lot has occurred since, most notably the pandemic and its results. But it stays a well timed piece, and may make a powerful impression with conductor Ilan Volkov conducting the BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra and the composer herself delivering its spoken textual content.

You may even see its 2019 Dublin premiere right here:

Nicole Lizée: Blurr is the Color of My True Love’s Eyes (BBC co-commission: European premiere)

29 July (Promenade 18)

As soon as a member of the Montreal indie rock band The Besnard Lakes, Nicole Lizée (b1973) is now certainly one of Canada’s main modern composers with works commissioned by such main ensembles because the Kronos Quartet and the San Francisco Symphony. In a current interview, she confessed that the determine that has most impressed her is Kate Bush.

Lizée’s concerto, Blurr is the Color of My True Love’s Eyes will likely be arriving sizzling from its premiere in Ottawa final June. Co-commissioned by Canada’s Nationwide Arts Centre Orchestra (NACO) and BBC Radio 3, the work is particularly tailor-made for star percussionist Colin Currie, impressed by his musicianship and his enthusiasm for Lizée’s work. Currie himself will carry out the work with the BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra performed by Alpesh Chauhan.

Hildur Guðnadóttir & Sam Slater: Battlefield 2042 (European premiere)

1 August (Promenade 21)

Simply to show there’s one thing for everybody, the BBC Proms this yr provides its first Gaming Promenade, subtitled ‘From 8-Bit to Infinity’. For premiere fans there’s the prospect of listening to Hildur Guðnadóttir and Sam Slater’s music for the favored first-person shooter sport, Battlefield 2042, in a Suite organized for the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra by the live performance’s conductor, Robert Ames.

Icelandic cellist and composer Hildur Guðnadóttir (b1982) and sound designer Sam Slater are a well-established crew, collectively creating the Academy Award-winning rating for the movie Joker (2019), and music for the historic miniseries Chernobyl. Battlefield 2042 was the primary venture on which they labored collectively as co-composers: their transient was to keep away from the standard heroic symphonic type and create one thing ‘disruptive’. All of the sounds heard had been created utilizing earth, steel, glass, and sand, their sounds stretched and distorted to create musical sounds. For those who’re curious to listen to how Ames has translated all this into orchestral phrases….

Julian Anderson: Symphony No. 2 ‘Prague Panoramas’ (BBC co-commission: London premiere)

5 August (Promenade 26)

New works by Julian Anderson (b1967), usually fantastically scored and musically intriguing, have been main highlights in previous Proms seasons. Their energy is to an extent defined by his blunt assertion in an interview revealed earlier this yr: ‘If I don’t just like the music I write myself, who the hell else has an opportunity to? It’s all about speaking.’

Impressed by a guide of historic, wide-angle images of Prague by Josef Sudek that Anderson got here throughout at an exhibition, his Second Symphony’s premiere was lengthy delayed because of the pandemic. Anderson took benefit of the delays, fine-tuning the rating earlier than it was lastly premiered this previous January in Munich. It has since – appropriately – been carried out in Prague performed by Semyon Bychkov, who will once more conduct the work at this Proms efficiency.

The efficiency on 22 April 2022 by the Czech Philharmonic Orchestra performed by Semyon Bychkov:

Gavin Higgins: Concerto Grosso for Brass Band & Orchestra (BBC Fee: world premiere)

8 August (Promenade 30)

The BBC Nationwide Orchestra of Wales, having already premiered Beamish’s Hive earlier within the season, will likely be becoming a member of forces on this Promenade not simply with a soloist, however an entire ensemble within the type of the award-winning Tredegar Band. The work is by Gavin Higgins (b1983), a composer whose first music making was as a tenor horn participant in his native brass band.

Higgins grew up in a mining neighborhood within the Forest of Dean, and his punchy, visceral writing continuously faucets into his pit band roots. He describes his Concerto Grosso as ‘a love letter to that music and people individuals’.

Matthew Kaner: Pearl (BBC fee: world premiere)

10 August (Promenade 33)

One can hardly ask for a greater solo singer for a brand new work, or certainly some other work requiring a delicate response to textual content, than baritone Roderick Williams, who will likely be singing the world premiere of Pearl by British composer Matthew Kaner (b1986). This units extracts from a medieval English lament, as translated by Simon Armitage. This tells of a person, mourning the loss of life of a younger youngster, who revisits the place the place he misplaced her. There he falls asleep, and desires of her within the afterlife. As Kaner explains, his work depicts ‘the protagonist’s earthly mourning, his dream imaginative and prescient and the uncanny but transferring look of his daughter in paradise, surrounded by the heavenly choir of all those that have additionally left this world. It’s an explicitly non secular textual content however I’ve tried to steer the piece in the direction of a common message of grief and redemption.’

Missy Mazzoli: Violin Concerto ‘Procession’ (European premiere)

14 August (Promenade 38)

In a current interview, the American composer Missy Mazzoli (b1980) outlined her inventive credo: ‘With every work, I endeavour to supply a brand new language for ideas and emotions we suppress in on a regular basis life, a recognition of the susceptible and terrifying components of ourselves. I additionally need to present area through which we are able to course of the overwhelming nature of the world.’

Her Violin Concerto, ‘Procession’, is her response to the on-going pandemic – an evocation of the ‘spells, incantations, processions and ecstatic dances’ that had been the ‘medieval therapeutic rites developed throughout pandemics’. Jennifer Koh would be the soloist, with the Philharmonic performed by Santtu-Matias Rouvali.

Mark-Anthony Turnage: Time Flies (BBC co-commission: UK premiere)

15 August (Promenade 39)

Invited to the Tokyo Olympics, however unable to attend because of a world journey ban, Mark-Anthony Turnage (b1960) responded three years in the past with this jazz-inspired work. However reasonably than one thing light-hearted, you must anticipate one thing gritty and emotionally affecting. In a current interview, Turnage confessed that his new work was impressed by his Pentecostal upbringing: ‘Being instructed day by day of your childhood you had been going to burn for eternity until you repented your sinful methods tends to breed concern and a deep dread. I nonetheless have apocalyptic nightmares. They gasoline my music, which tends to be fairly pessimistic.’

Thomas Adès: Märchentänze (UK premiere)

26 August (Promenade 52)

The pastoral strains of Vaughan Williams’s The Lark Ascending could seem an unlikely companion to a brand new work by Thomas Adès (b1971), a composer of normally splintering type. However here’s a new violin work, Märchentänze – ‘dances from fairytale’ – a four-movement suite which may be a shocking match: just like the Vaughan Williams, it was initially scored for violin and piano (in 2020); and – surprisingly in contrast to Lark Ascending however attribute of Vaughan Williams – it features a folksong; and which incorporates in its third motion, ‘A Skylark for Jane’, what the composer describes as ‘an outpouring of birdsong’. Chances are you’ll examine and distinction as violinist Pekka Kuusisto performs each these works…

Errollyn Wallen: Girl Tremendous Spy Adventurer (world premiere)

29 August (Proms at Birmingham)

At simply 4 minutes – and because the ultimate merchandise of a programme whose coronary heart is quarter-hour of Lieder, Op. 4 by the formidable Dame Ethel Smyth – this guarantees to be comparatively brief and candy. Errollyn Wallen (b1958) herself explains that ‘I had an imaginary cartoon character in thoughts’; in any other case, she leaves the music to elucidate itself. It will likely be carried out by mezzo-soprano Claire Barnett-Jones, winner of the Viewers Prize eventually yr’s BBC Cardiff Singer of the World, with Simon Lepper on the piano.

Public Service Broadcasting: This New Noise (BBC fee: world premiere)

30 August (Promenade 58)

Again in 2019, cult ‘retro-futurists’ Public Service Broadcasting introduced dancing astronauts and a Sputnik into the Albert Corridor of their The Race to House. The BBC liked it sufficient to ask them again this yr to assist have fun a century of (appropriately) public-service broadcasting. This New Noise, we’re promised, is to be ‘a joyously eclectic, album-length celebration of 100 years of BBC Radio, backed by the BBC Symphony Orchestra’.

Philip Glass: No extra, you petty spirits (BBC co-commission: world premiere)

3 September (Proms and the ENO at Printworks, London)

‘Glass Handel’ sounds nearly as if it’s meant to be a pun. It’s in reality an easy if barely uncommon pairing of the nice and beloved Baroque composer with the pioneering minimalist of our time. ‘No extra, you petty spirits’ has been specifically written to suit this programme of music by these two composers, and as such is written for countertenor Anthony Roth Costanzo with an acceptable choice of devices – together with harpsichord – performed by musicians of the English Nationwide Orchestra directed by Karen Kamensek. Additionally taking part will likely be George Condominium doing reside portray, and nature beatboxer/vocal sound designer Jason Singh.

Marius Neset: Geyser (BBC fee: world premiere)

3 September (Promenade 63)

Making his Proms debut, Norwegian jazz saxophonist and composer Marius Neset (b1985) is clearly hoping to make greater than a splash along with his new work, which – lasting 65 minutes – takes up an entire Late Evening Promenade. On his personal web site, Neset says: ‘I’m very impressed by individuals like Frank Zappa, Django Bates, Pat Metheny and Wayne Shorter the place the music and the enjoying is one.’ Add to that blend Mahler and Messiaen, and you’ll have some thought what to anticipate. Neset and his quintet will be a part of forces with the London Sinfonietta and conductor Geoffrey Patterson.

Betsy Jolas: bTunes (world premiere)

5 September (Promenade 66)

Franco-American composer Betsy Jolas (b1926) is a former pupil of at least Darius Milhaud and Olivier Messiaen, and for some time was the latter’s assistant on the Paris Conservatoire. Although her musical type has at all times been ‘superior’, she has expressed the will to ‘write lovely music’ and is admired by conductors together with Simon Rattle and Kent Nagano. bTunes is a piano concerto – not the primary by Jolas, although she tends to hide works she writes in that style with quirky titles, comparable to <Stances>[itals] composed in 1978. Her newest is within the type of a set, and he or she says ‘displays the best way most individuals hearken to music right this moment – by means of playlists’. It has been written particularly for the soloist at this Promenade, Nicolas Hodges, who will carry out with the BBC Symphony Orchestra performed by Karina Kanellakis.

James B Wilson: 1922 (BBC fee: world premiere)

10 September (Final Evening of the Proms)

Following This New Noise by Public Service Broadcasting (30 August), right here’s another celebration of the BBC – particularly its first broadcast a century in the past. James B Wilson (the ‘B’ is to tell apart him from the Irish composer James Wilson, who coincidentally was born in 1922, whereas our JBW was born in 1990) studied on the Royal Academy of Music underneath the colorful Gary Carpenter (some individuals might keep in mind Carpenter’s ‘star flip’ early in his profession within the unique model of The Wicker Man, in addition to taking classes with Maxwell Davies.

Wilson’s different influences vary from Benjamin Britten to the movies of David Lynch. Amongst his many distinctive collaborations, with such musicians and ensembles because the pianist Benjamin Grosvenor and Genesis16, maybe probably the most excellent is being the primary composer to be commissioned to write down a chunk for the Chineke! Orchestra; the ensuing piece, The Inexperienced Fuse, being premiered at The Cheltenham Pageant.

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