Record

Performance TitleProms: Sir Henry Wood Promenade Concerts 1941 - Forty-Seventh Season - Prom 37 - Last Night of the Proms
Performance Date23 August 1941
Performance DaySaturday
Performance Time18:00
Main PerformersHenry Wendon - vocal,
Maurice Cole - piano,
Marie Goossens - harp
Orchestra or BandLondon Symphony Orchestra
ConductorsSir Henry Wood
Set ListOverture, 'Rebus', Frank Bridge,
'Piano Concerto in A Minor, Op.54', Schumann (Maurice Cole),
'Theme and Variations, from 3rd Suite in G, Op.55', Tchaikovsky,
'Toccata and Fugue in D Minor', Bach-Klenovsky,
'Song of Creation' (The Immortal Hour), Rutland Boughton (Henry Wendon, Marie Goossens),
'Faery Song' (The Immortal Hour), Rutland Boughton (Henry Wendon, Marie Goossens),
'Fantasia on British Sea-Songs', arr. H Wood,
'God Save the King' (The National Anthem)
Performance NotesEnd of Promenade Season - Success of Albert Hall Experiment:-
"The present season of the Proms, so like to and so different from all previous seasons of the proms, was triumphantly concluded on Saturday evening. It ended with the proper ritual, of which the chief observance is Sir Henry Wood's Fantasia on British Sea Songs, with the audience taking up - this year with tropical fervour - the refrain 'Rule Britannia' and repeating it.
The Programme was short, as prom programmes go. Schuman's piano concerto, played by Mr Maurice Cole, being the only work of substance. the second part, in which Mr Henry Wendon sang two short songs from The Immortal Hour, was broadcast. The whole concert was conducted by Sir Henry Wood, but he broke his self imposed rule of silence to make a short speech in which he referred to the valuable work done by his colleague, Mr Basil Cameron, in lightening the conductor's enormous task though the season just ended.
Viewed in retrospect the season is remarkable for the very large audiences that have assembled on the classical nights, so that the despised Albert Hall will henceforth have a claim to be the home of the proms, even if its atmosphere can never be quite so homely as that of Queen's Hall. The programmes have perhaps wisely , been conservative, but the new practice of having two conductors to share the work will enable a more adventurous policy to be pursued in future years, to which Sir Henry is already, with characteristic zest, looking forward - even, as he jocularly remarked, to his second jubilee."
(The Times, 25 August 1941)
Related Archival MaterialProms Guide (RAHE/1/1941/3A),
Programme (RAHE/1/1941/38)
URLhttps://thirdlight.royalalberthall.com/pf.tlx/O6Out-OmHXj9K
Catalogue
Reference NumberTitleDate
RAHE/1/1941/38The Royal Philharmonic Society - Sir Henry Wood's Forty-Seventh Season of Queen's Hall Promenade Concerts [Prom 37]23 August 1941
Work
Ref NoTitleNo of Performances
EamoseadiekifoolProms: Sir Henry Wood Promenade Concerts 1941 - Forty-Seventh Season36
Performers
CodeName of Performer(s)
DS/UK/1335Wendon; Henry (fl 1930s); British operatic tenor
DS/UK/6318Cole; Maurice (1902-1990); English pianist
DS/UK/130London Symphony Orchestra (LSO); 1904-; English orchestra
DS/UK/39Wood; Sir; Henry (3 March 1869 – 19 August 1944); CH; English conductor
DS/UK/31Britain; British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC); 18 October 1922-; British public service broadcaster
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