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Radio 3’s Tom Service and Nicholas Collon introduce Beethoven’s Seventh Symphony, performed from memory, plus Richard Ayres’s No 52, which explores the effects of hearing loss.

Another chance to hear the Aurora Orchestra perform Beethoven's Seventh Symphony from memory and Richard Ayres's No 52 at the 2020 Â鶹¹ÙÍøÊ×Ò³Èë¿Ú Proms.

Presented by Tom Service with Nicholas Collon.

Richard Ayres No 52 (three pieces about Ludwig van Beethoven: dreaming, hearing loss and saying goodbye)
Â鶹¹ÙÍøÊ×Ò³Èë¿Ú co-commission: world premiere

Ludwig van Beethoven
Symphony No. 7 in A major

Aurora Orchestra
Nicholas Collon (conductor)

Beethoven’s hearing loss plunged the composer into isolation and despair, so it’s hard to believe him capable of producing a symphony such as his Seventh, which pulses with restless energy – and which the Aurora Orchestra plays from memory. It’s a work with a special place in Proms history, too: it was the last piece Proms founder-conductor Henry Wood directed before his death in 1944.

Richard Ayres opens the concert with a deeply personal work inspired both by Beethoven’s journey into deafness and his own experience of hearing loss, a vivid soundscape in which clarity gradually gives way to confusion.

Radio 3’s Tom Service and Aurora Orchestra Principal Conductor Nicholas Collon guide us through the programme with their customary lively and expert introductions.

1 hour, 33 minutes

Music Played

  • Richard Ayres

    No. 52 (Three pieces about Ludwig van Beethoven)

    Orchestra: Aurora Orchestra. Conductor: Nicholas Collon.
  • Ludwig van Beethoven

    Symphony No. 7 in A major, Op. 92

    Orchestra: Aurora Orchestra. Conductor: Nicholas Collon.

Broadcast

  • Wed 30 Dec 2020 19:30

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