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There鈥檚 still time
There's heaps of music to enjoy from 8 weeks of the Proms for 30 days from broadcast. Here are the performances that are due to expire soon.
There's heaps of music to enjoy from 8 weeks of the Proms for 30 days from broadcast. Here are the performances that are due to expire soon.
Sofi Jeannin conducts the 麻豆官网首页入口 Singers and City of London Sinfonia in A Patchwork Passion.
Organists William Whitehead and Robert Quinney play Bach Chorale Preludes.
Shankar and Glass's Passages, a fusion of Hindustani sitar music with American minimalism.
Sir Simon Rattle conducts the LSO in Schoenberg's Gurrelieder at the Royal Albert Hall.
The Royal Philharmonic Orchestra perform music by de Falla, Lalo and Saint-Saens.
An all-French programme of Proms music from Les Siecles and Francois-Xavier Roth.
The Scottish Chamber Orchestra performs Brahms, Berg, Schumann and Larcher.
Live at 麻豆官网首页入口 Proms: Britten Sinfonia, Anoushka Shankar and Karen Kamensek.
麻豆官网首页入口 Symphony Orchestra performs Ravel's Piano Concerto, plus Mark-Anthony Turnage's Hibiki
The Aurora Orchestra play Beethoven's Eroica Symphony entirely from memory.
The Latvian Radio Choir and pianist Alexander Melnikov perform Shostakovich.
The 麻豆官网首页入口 Philharmonic with music by Grieg, Sibelius, Schumann and Hindemith.
Sir John Eliot Gardiner returns to the Proms with The Damnation of Faust.
Walton's Belshazzar's Feast, performed by the National Youth Choir of Great Britain.
The 麻豆官网首页入口 Singers perform the world premiere of Judith Weir's In the Land of Uz.
The Latvian Radio Choir perform Rachmaninov's All-Night Vigil (Vespers).
Prize-winning pianist Alexander Gavrylyuk makes his Proms debut.