China Daily (Hong Kong)

A casual way to enjoy classical music in London

- By ANTOINE POLLEZ in London

It’s a world apart from the polished atmosphere of traditiona­l classical music concerts.

Way up near the roof of London’s Royal Albert Hall, spectators at the summer-time Proms soak in the music without worrying about the convention­s.

“If you’re sitting in a seat, you have to sit with your back straight all the time and you can get a bit uncomforta­ble,” says Lisa Beecham, a 38-yearold teacher from London.

“But up here you can lie down, you can walk around, you can move position.”

She is among the tens of thousands who flock every year to the Proms, the world’s biggest classical music festival staged at the 5,500-capacity venue.

Only a minority of them experience the concerts from the Gallery, right at the top of the circular, domed 1870s Italianate masterpiec­e on the edge of Hyde Park.

The Gallery is a unique place to experience the BBC Promenade Concerts, which run annually for eight weeks between July and September.

The circular corridor, more than 250 metres long, rings the top of the auditorium and offers a striking view from beneath its high arches.

Up here in the Albert Hall’s highest reaches — an area referred to as “the gods” in British theaters — there are no padded red seats or numbered rows.

Prommers stand where they like to best appreciate the music floating up from the philharmon­ic orchestra on the stage a dizzying distance below.

Leaning against the barrier, with a clear view down to the musicians, Matthew Knight says he prefers standing.

“You feel more part of it than if you were just sitting down,” he says, marking the tempo with his right hand.

Knight, who works at London’s Southwark Cathedral, comes to around a dozen concerts each year.

“It is the best festival in the world,” he adds.

Like him, most concert-goers in the Gallery lean against the railing to see the stage, some with binoculars to follow the conductor close-up.

If it gets crowded, elbow room is at a premium in order to see the orchestra.

A few metres back from the railing, lying on a blanket, Erica Seo and her partner have made the opposite choice.

They listen to Robert Schumann’s Violin Concerto with their eyes closed, each one lost in their own thoughts.

“It is just like being in the living room, but much better music, because it is obviously live, and you get really a feel of the detail, you can feel the pulse,” she says.

Jane Smith, 61, is attracted by the “anything goes” ambiance.

Barefoot and swinging with the rhythm, she is a regular who comes several times a year — and always to the Gallery.

Standing by the access stairs, the ushers are relaxed toward Gallery-going Prommers.

Some groups of friends make a mini-picnic out of it, sitting on the floor munching sandwiches, with plastic glasses spread out around them.

The “unpretenti­ous, relaxed” atmosphere pulls in a “much more diverse” crowd than other London classical music concerts, says Sarah Legrand, 33, who came with a friend.

“Here you can see students, young people with their kids,” she says, looking around. “In other normal indoor classical music venues, most people are retired.”

 ?? JUSTIN TALLIS / AFP ?? London’s Royal Albert Hall stages the world’s biggest classical music festival every year.
JUSTIN TALLIS / AFP London’s Royal Albert Hall stages the world’s biggest classical music festival every year.

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