Saturday 14 August 2010
4.30pm Gates Open
Before the afternoon’s entertainment begins, there’s time to enjoy all the fun of the traditional fairground stalls and visit the fascinating Napoleonic encampment. While you settle down to enjoy your picnic, the music begins with the lively jazz band Cambridge Jazz Co.
6.45pm Napoleonic Cavalry and Infantry displays
The ‘age of elegance’ is expertly brought to life as the Napoleonic Association demonstrate the skills needed to survive on the battlefields of the period. It’s a captivating and colourful display of top-class horsemanship; expect lances, rifles, chivalry and plenty of cheering!
7.25pm Evening gun salute
The English Field Artillery Company will announce the commencement of the evening’s musical programme with a volley of shots from an authentic vintage field gun, answered by infantry musket fire.
7.30pm - 10.00pm The Musical Programme
New English Concert Orchestra
Conductor: Douglas Coombes
Flute Soloist: Annie Lydford
Soprano: Denise Leigh
Host: Popular BBC broadcaster Tommy Pearson
The historic rumble of the Spitfire engine will accompany the beautiful opening pieces of the musical programme, as a meticulously choreographed aerial display is executed in the skies over the concert arena. In true Battle Proms style, the evening continues with a wealth of triumphal classics performed by the New English Concert Orchestra, joined by our superb soprano soloist Denise Leigh for an enchanting selection of arias and operettas.
Naturally, the programme would not be complete without Tchaikovsky's 1812 Overture with live cannon fire, and of course the signature piece which gives this special event its name: Beethoven's ‘Battle Symphony’, a work which was originally composed to include the firing of 193 cannon as part of the score.
The Battle Proms is the only regular concert in the world to rise dramatically to this challenge using live cannon with real black powder explosions, each fired electronically according to the original score by the orchestra’s percussionist. Add to this a sky lit with precisely and expertly launched fireworks, and you truly have a spectacle of unforgettable dramatic impact.
Then it’s time to warm up your singing voice for the traditional flag-waving proms finale, including favourites Jerusalem, Rule Britannia and Land of Hope and Glory, culminating in a dazzling firework spectacular!
The Battle Proms Concert promises the ultimate party in the park packed with ground-shaking, breath-taking entertainment that you will never forget.
Book online or call the Information and Booking Line 01432 355416
Per Adult:
£27 if booked before 1 February 2010. (Online purchase only.)
£28 if booked between 1 February and 30 April 2010
£30 if booked between 1 May 2010 and the day before the concert.
£35 on the day of concert (subject to availability).
Children aged 5 to 15:
£15
(children aged 4 and under are free, and do not require a ticket)
You can pre-order a superb picnic hamper, and also hire chairs, tables and gazebos to pick up on arrival at the concert. Click here to pre-order a picnic from Just Picnics
Click here to pre-order furniture from The Concert Shop
Althorp has been home to the Spencer family for over 500 years, and contains a fascinating variety of pictures, furniture and ceramics, as well as boasting some fine interiors. Like many great country houses, it has benefited from the discriminating and varied collecting of generations of occupants, their marriages and chance provisions.
Althorp's collection of portraits is particularly fine, and justly famous. As a record of a family, and as a record of English portraiture, it is outstanding. The roll-call of names - Rubens, Van Dyck, Reynolds, Gainsborough will be familiar to everyone. But there are numerous rare and beautiful paintings by lesser-known artists which will appeal to casual visitors and connoisseurs alike. In the decorative arts, from carpets to candelabra, there is much which is distinguished.
There has been a house at Althorp since the beginning of the sixteenth century. Sir John Spencer acquired a 300-acre estate around Althorp in 1508 and his grandson, another Sir John, had made Althorp the principal Spencer home by the time of his death in 1586. The house itself is not the product of any one period, but has changed over the years. Its re-modellings naturally show the prevailing taste of the time, woven into a broader synthesis. The true medium for harmony, however, has been the house's continual ownership and occupation by the same family.
Althorp Park official website: www.althorp.com
Althorp Park, Althorp, Northamptonshire, NN7 4HQ
For detailed directions and public transport information please click here
For a list of places to stay in the area, please click here
Exclusive discounts for Battle Proms Concert attendees are available at:
Highgate House Hotel (Reservations: 01604 505505)
Holiday Inn Rugby/Northampton (Reservations: 01788 824820)