BBC Proms: audiences return to the Proms in a celebration of live music

  • Six weeks of live concerts every day from the Royal Albert Hall in its 150th-anniversary year
  • Audiences welcomed back to attend Proms in person
  • A celebration of the riches of the British music scene
  • Four mystery Proms to be revealed at a later date
  • First Night premiere of Sir James MacMillan’s companion piece to Vaughan Williams’s Serenade to Music, co-commissioned by the BBC with Help Musicians and performed by a quartet of British singers
  • From the Kanneh-Mason siblings and Michael Morpurgo performing The Carnival of the Animals to the concert debut of the Sinfonia of London under Proms favourite John Wilson and a night with singer-songwriter Moses Sumney, there is something for everyone
  • Over 50 musicians make their Proms debuts, including Patricia KopatchinskajaVíkingur Ólafsson and Abel Selaocoe
  • A host of anniversary composers, from Josquin des Prez to Stravinsky, Malcolm Arnold and  Ruth Gipps
  • BBC Radio 3 broadcasts every note live and 20 Proms are televised, with all broadcasts available on BBC Sounds and BBC iPlayer

The BBC Proms heralds a summer of live music on a scale not seen since before the pandemic. With 52 concerts over 44 days featuring 30 orchestras and ensembles, over 100 soloists and conductors and more than 2,000 musicians, this ambitious season celebrates live music-making across the UK.

Audiences are welcomed back in person to enjoy a feast of live music in the Royal Albert Hall. As always, every note of the festival is broadcast on BBC Radio 3 and BBC Sounds, with 20 concerts broadcast on BBC TV and iPlayer for audiences to enjoy at home.

The BBC Orchestras and Choirs remain the beating heart of the Proms, joined by a wealth of world-class British orchestras and ensembles from across the UK this summer. Some of the best-loved British artists as well as emerging stars appear, including Nicola Benedetti, Karen Cargill, Lucy Crowe, Sir Mark Elder, Benjamin Grosvenor, Steven Isserlis, Sally Matthews, Sir Simon Rattle, Christine Rice, Roderick Williams and Sir John Eliot Gardiner in his 60th Proms appearance.

Marking the 150th anniversary of the Royal Albert Hall and 80 years since the venue became home to the BBC Proms, there is a celebration of the Hall’s magnificent organ across five concerts, as well as four new works commissioned by the BBC. Augusta Read Thomas, Britta Byström, Grace-Evangeline Mason and Gity Razaz, whose new work opens the Last Night of the Proms, have taken the Hall’s original name ‘The Royal Albert Hall of Arts and Sciences’, as inspiration.

The First Night of the Proms opens with Vaughan Williams’s Serenade to Music, a love song to music and musicians premiered at the Royal Albert Hall under the baton of Proms founder-conductor Henry Wood in 1938, led by a quartet of British singers – Elizabeth Llewellyn, Jess Dandy, Allan Clayton and Michael Mofidian with the BBC Symphony Orchestra and Principal Guest Conductor Dalia Stasevska. The same forces give the world premiere of When Soft Voices Die, a companion pieceto the Serenade to Music by Sir James MacMillan, setting texts by Shelley. This is co-commissioned by the BBC and Help Musicians in the latter’s centenary year to celebrate music and those who bring it to life. The programme also includes Poulenc’s Organ Concerto with leading organist Daniel Hyde.

Whilst showcasing UK artists, the Proms remains an international festival and is proud to present some of the great international soloists and conductors alongside rising stars from across the globe. The Mahler Chamber Orchestra, the only international orchestra at the festival this year, brings the world premiere of a BBC commission by George Benjamin, belatedly celebrating his 60th birthday last year. International artists include Pierre-Laurent Aimard, Joshua Bell, Sol Gabetta, Kirill Gerstein, Mirga Gražinytė-Tyla, Vladimir Jurowski and Stuart Skelton who joins accordionist Ksenija Sidorova and Chief Conductor of the BBC Symphony Orchestra, Sakari Oramo, for the Last Night of the Proms celebrations.

For the first time ever, the Proms will have four unprogrammed mystery Proms to be revealed at a later date, allowing the festival to respond to the changing times.

The award-winning Sinfonia of London makes its much-anticipated concert debut under Proms favourite John Wilson, who re-established the orchestra in 2018. A host of British opera singers – Natalya Romaniw, Sally Matthews, Nardus Williams, Christine Rice, Nicky Spence and Freddie De Tommaso – join forces for an evening of opera exploring themes of isolation and reunion which are particularly relevant at this time.

The Proms presents a rich repertoire of music spanning more than 500 years. Concerts include Bach’s St Matthew Passion with Jonathan Cohen directing Arcangelo and Arcangelo Chorus; Glyndebourne Festival Opera’s performance of Wagner’s Tristan and Isolde conducted by Robin Ticciati, marking 60 years of Proms performances by the opera company; The Golden Age of Broadway with the BBC Concert Orchestra and Richard Balcombe; Chineke! Orchestra returning for its fourth visit to the Proms, celebrating diversity in composers as well as performers under the baton of Kalena Bovell; genre-defying singer-songwriter Moses Sumney with the BBC Symphony Orchestra and Creative Artist in Association Jules Buckley and award-winning jazz saxophonist and composer Nubya Garcia.

To mark 50 years since the death of Stravinsky, the Aurora Orchestra tackles its most ambitious challenge yet, performing the 1945 suite from The Firebird from memory, whilst Sir Simon Rattle leads the London Symphony Orchestra in an all-Stravinsky programme

Building on musical magpie Stravinsky’s reputation for drawing on the music of the past, a focus on composers who have copied, borrowed and quoted from each other runs throughout the festival. From Josquin des Prez and Lusitano to Respighi, Nico Muhly and Shiva Feshareki, the Proms presents a range of works spanning five centuries that look to the past for their inspiration.

Other composer anniversaries marked include Thomas Adès, Ruth Gipps, Josquin des Prez, Astor Piazzolla, Ariel Ramírez, Robert Simpson, Pauline Viardot, Alexander von Zemlinsky, and Proms favourite Malcolm Arnold. The Monday-lunchtime chamber-music series, Proms at Cadogan Hall returns for six concerts and features a different anniversary composer each week.

Camille Saint-Saëns, who died 100 years ago, is celebrated in a special family Prom. The seven talented Kanneh-Mason siblings and musical friends are joined by former Children’s Laureate Michael Morpurgo for The Carnival of the Animals, which gets a fresh update in witty new poems by Morpurgo and a new companion piece by Daniel Kidane. A digital project for families, working with partners across the UK, will accompany the Prom.

The Proms has a long history of encouraging and developing new talent. More than 50 of the hottest new classical artists are making their Proms debuts, including ground-breaking ensemble Manchester Collective, tenor Freddie De Tommaso,conductor Jonathon Heyward, violinist Patricia Kopatchinskaja,pianist Víkingur Ólafsson and soprano Nardus Williams.

Showcasing new works by established and emerging composers is an integral part of the Proms. There are premieres of works by Thomas Adès, Mason Bates, George Benjamin, Charlotte Bray, Unsuk Chin, Laura Jurd, Daniel Kidane, George Lewis, Sir James MacMillan, Ella Milch-Sheriff, Samy Moussa, and Elizabeth Ogonek.

Henry Wood’s vision to present the greatest classical music to the widest possible audience is honoured through accessible ticket-pricing, with seated tickets from £7.50, half-price tickets for under-18s and Promming day tickets at £6 (plus booking fees – please check the website closer to the season for confirmation of whether Prommers will be able to stand), alongside the extraordinary broadcast offer across the BBC, bringing a summer filled with live music to everyone.

David Pickard, Director of the Proms, says: ‘Planning a Proms season in a pandemic isn’t easy. We have relied on the creativity and collaboration of many people to offer a programme of such ambition, scale and quality, and are proud to celebrate so much outstanding British talent this summer. We are looking forward to welcoming live audiences back to the Royal Albert Hall in its 150th anniversary year, and to sharing six weeks of live music with audiences in the Hall and at home on BBC Radio 3 and on BBC TV. I hope you will join us for a summer filled with music.’