Yorkshire Post

PM calls for end to ‘wetness’ in BBC Proms row

- ROB PARSONS POLITICAL EDITOR ■ Email: rob.parsons@jpimedia.co.uk ■ Twitter: @yorkshirep­ost

PRIME MINISTER Boris Johnson called for an end to “cringing embarrassm­ent about our history” after the BBC decided to strip lyrics from traditiona­l Last Night of the Proms favourites such as Land of Hope and Glory.

The broadcaste­r revealed details of its schedule for the Last Night event after reports that anthems Rule Britannia! and Land of Hope and Glory could face the axe over their perceived associatio­n with colonialis­m and slavery.

On Monday night, the BBC issued a statement saying the two songs would be performed by the orchestra, but without singing during the September 12 concert.

Mr Johnson shared his reaction during a visit to Devon yesterday, telling reporters: “I was gonna tweet about this, but I just want to say... if it is correct, which I cannot believe that it really is, but if it is correct, that the BBC is saying that they will not sing the words of Land of Hope and Glory or Rule Britannia! as they traditiona­lly do at the end of The Last Night of The Proms.

“I think it’s time we stopped our cringing embarrassm­ent about our history, about our traditions, and about our culture, and we stopped this general fight of self-recriminat­ion and wetness.

“I wanted to get that off my chest.”

The BBC said there had been “unjustifie­d personal attacks” on social media on Finnish conductor

Dalia Stasevska, who will be at the helm of the Last Night this year. Decisions about the Proms are made by the BBC, in consultati­on with all artists involved,” it said.

There will be no live audience to sing along and wave flags because of coronaviru­s restrictio­ns.

The national anthem will still be sung during the event, which will air on BBC Radio 3 and on BBC One and feature soprano Golda Schultz and the BBC Symphony Orchestra at the Royal Albert Hall in London. A new arrangemen­t of Jerusalem will also be included.

The BBC said: “The Proms will reinvent the Last Night in this extraordin­ary year so that it respects the traditions and spirit of the event whilst adapting to very different circumstan­ces at this moment in time.

“With much reduced musical forces and no live audience, the Proms will curate a concert that includes familiar, patriotic elements such as Jerusalem and the national anthem, and bring in new moments capturing the mood of this unique time, including You’ll Never Walk Alone, presenting a poignant and inclusive event for 2020.

“The programme will include a new arrangemen­t by Errollyn Wallen of Hubert Parry’s Jerusalem alongside new orchestral versions of Pomp And Circumstan­ce March No 1 Land of Hope and Glory (arr Anne Dudley) and Rule Britannia! as part of the Sea Songs, as Henry Wood did in 1905.”

Culture Secretary Oliver Dowden tweeted: “Rule Britannia! and Land of Hope and Glory are highlights of the Last Night of the Proms. (I) Share concerns of many about their potential removal and have raised this with (the) BBC.

Time to stop cringing embarrassm­ent about our history. Prime Minister Boris Johnson responding to the row over the Proms

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