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BBC Proms

   
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Productions and Projects

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Gaia Theory
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2014
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A new large-scale work by Jonathon Dove, Gaia Theory, for symphony orchestra has been commissioned by the BBC Proms for the 2014 season and premiered on 28 July (Prom 15), with the BBC Symphony Orchestra, conducted by Josep Pons at the Royal Albert Hall, London.

Inspired by the work of James Lovelock and continuing Dove's concern to address environmental issues in his music, Gaia Theory takes as its starting point Lovelock's idea that the earth behaves as a self-regulating organism, and his description of all the inter-related processes maintaining the earth in the optimum conditions for life as a kind of dance.

From Dove's website:

    I was struck by James Lovelock's observation that, since life on earth began, the sun has got perhaps 30% hotter, and yet the earth has not. For hundreds of millions of years, the impact of the sun's heat has been moderated by cloud cover, the atmosphere, the albido of the polar ice-sheets and so on, all affected by the behaviour of microscopic organisms as well as by animal and ultimately by human activity, not to mention the respiration of plants and trees and innumerable processes all, as Lovelock describes, 'locked in a sort of dance in which everything changes together'.

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H2hOpe: The Water Diviner's Tale
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2007
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H2hOpe: The Water Diviner's Tale explores the hot issue of climate change.

It is a dramatic musical drama piece for all ages which has been created by Oscar-winning composer Rachel Portman and poet/playwright Owen Sheers.

The world premiere is on 27 August at the Royal Albert Hall as part of the BBC Proms.

    A natural disaster has befallen the city which has separated the Lost Children from their families. As they search the desolate area they come across the Water Diviner, who feels he has failed his task of following the water and telling its stories. The city's leaders have ignored his warnings and so disaster has struck. But as he talks to the Lost Children, the Water Diviner starts to think that these may be the people he has been looking for to help him change the future.

    The thought re-animates the Water Diviner and he sets out to tell the Lost Children his tale, whilst 'casting' them into the story as he goes along.

Rachel Portman, who was the first female composer to win an Oscar, with her score for 'Emma' in 1997.

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We Turned on the Light
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2006
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The world premiere of We Turned on the Light, a choral work on the threat of climate change, with libretto by Caryl Churchill and music by Orlando Gough, was presented at The Proms on 29 July 2006.

Gough was commissioned by The Proms to write a choral piece using amateur and professional singers and his choir, The Shout. In Gough’s words, it is about ‘the catastrophic consequences from apparently innocent actions’.

Churchill uses a device from her play The Skriker in which the grand-daughter of the grand-daughter of the protagonist/narrator speaks to the protagonist. In We Turned on the Light, the grand-daughter of the grand-daughter is suffering the effects of climate change and asks the present-day protagonist, ‘Didn’t you love me?’ The protagonist answers ‘I’m sorry…It’s hard to love people far away in time’.

The piece has a three-part structure.

Part 1, 'All The Good News', is about what the contemporary world sees as its benefits and achievements.

    ‘We turned on the light and flooded in the city’.
    ‘We drove the car faster’.
    ‘We bought a new T-shirt’.
    ‘We flew to the sunshine’.
    ‘We ate cherries in winter’.
In Part 2, 'The Good News Plus The Bad News', the grand-daughter of the grand-daughter shouts to the protagonist, ‘I hate you..’ and asks her question, 'Didn't you love me?'.

In Part 3, 'All The Bad News, Ending With A Kind Of Typhoon Of Bad News', there is a final coda with the words ‘The flowers are growing higher up the mountain’.

Over 500 people participated in the two performances. The Shout, the ‘Rabble Choirs’ of singers recruited from Glasgow, London and Proms audiences, and the BBC Symphony Orchestra performed in both. In the afternoon, they were joined by the National Youth Choirs of Scotland and Great Britain and the Rodolfus Choir. In the evening performance, they were joined by the BBC Symphony Chorus and Huddersfield Choral Society.

The webpage for We Turned on the Light, BBC Proms, 2006, is www.bbc.co.uk/proms

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