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BBC Symphony Orchestra
File:BBCSO Logo.jpg
Background information
OriginLondon
Years active1930–present
MembersChief conductor
Jiří Bělohlávek
Principal guest conductor
David Robertson
Günter Wand Conducting Chair
Semyon Bychkov
Conductor laureate
Sir Andrew Davis
Artist-in-association
Oliver Knussen
Chorus director
Stephen Jackson
Past membersFounder
Adrian Boult
WebsiteOfficial website

The BBC Symphony Orchestra (BBC SO) is a British radio orchestra based in London. Founded in 1930, it was the first permanent salaried orchestra in London, and is the only one of the city's five major symphony orchestras not to be self-governing. The BBC SO is the principal broadcast orchestra of the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC).

The orchestra was originally conceived as a joint enterprise by the BBC and the conductor Sir Thomas Beecham, but the latter withdrew, and the task of assembling and training the orchestra fell to the BBC's director of music, Adrian Boult. Among its guest conductors in its first years was Arturo Toscanini, who judged it the finest orchestra he had ever conducted. During the Second World War, Boult strove to maintain standards, but the senior management of the post-war BBC denied the orchestra the resources to meet competition from new and well-funded orchestras.

From the 1950s to the 1970s the orchestra failed to regain its pre-war standing, but after initiatives begun by the BBC controller of music William Glock, performing standards began to rise. By the first decades of the 21st century the orchestra was once again regarded by critics as of first-class status. From the outset the orchestra has been known for pioneering avant garde music, and it continues to do so, at the Proms, in concerts at the Barbican Centre, and in studio concerts from its base at BBC Maida Vale studios.

History

Background

Almost from its beginning in November 1922 the BBC had started broadcasting from its "2LO" transmitter with its own musical ensembles. The first such groups were the "2LO Dance Band", the "2LO Military Band", the "2LO Light Orchestra", and the "2LO Octette", all of which began broadcasting in 1923.[1] No concert promoter would co-operate with the BBC, regarding it as a dangerous competitor, but the British National Opera Company allowed broadcasts of its performances from the Royal Opera House.[2] John Reith, the general manager of the BBC, invited the opera company's musical director, Percy Pitt, to become the BBC's part-time musical adviser from May 1923. Later in the same year Pitt conducted the BBC's first broadcast symphony concert, which included Dvořák's New World Symphony and works by Saint-Saëns, Elgar and Weber.[3]

File:Percy-pitt-1910.jpg
Percy Pitt, the BBC's first director of music

Pitt expanded the regular eight-piece studio ensemble to form "The Wireless Orchestra" of 18 players, augmented to 37 for important broadcasts.[2] There was no thought at this stage that the BBC would maintain a full-scale symphonic orchestra, which would comprise up to 100 players; with Reith's approval, Pitt engaged various orchestras for a BBC concert series in 1924 at the Central Hall, Westminster.[2] Pitt and Landon Ronald conducted the Royal Albert Hall Orchestra, Eugene Goossens conducted the London Symphony Orchestra and Hamilton Harty and Sir Edward Elgar conducted the orchestra of the Royal Philharmonic Society.[4]

In 1924 the Wireless Orchestra, by then comprising 22 players, was contracted for six concerts a week. The following year, Pitt, by now working full-time for the BBC, as its director of music, augmented the ensemble to form the "Wireless Symphony Orchestra" for a new series of concerts broadcast from Covent Garden, conducted by Bruno Walter, Ernest Ansermet and Pierre Monteux.[5] In 1927 the BBC and Covent Garden collaborated in a series of public concerts with an orchestra of 150 players under conductors including Richard Strauss and Siegfried Wagner. Although the orchestra was large, it was not good. The BBC attempted to stop its contracted players sending deputies to rehearsals and even to concerts, but was unsuccessful.[n 1] In January 1928 The Musical Times protested:

The B.B.C. has been blamed for devoting too much time to the classics, and also for not giving them all that is due to them; it has been held responsible for the inferiority of the apparatus of the listener-in; it has been censured on a variety of trifling points, but never for the one heinous offence it has committed, and goes on committing: for this corporation, with all its assured and conspicuous wealth, has given and is giving us the worst orchestral performances ever heard in London. … This year at Queen's Hall they have assembled an orchestra which sounds as if it were composed in great part of "substitutes."[7]

In 1927 the BBC took over the responsibility for the Promenade Concerts, widely known as "the Proms". At first Henry Wood, the founding conductor, prevailed on the corporation to engage his Queen's Hall Orchestra for each Prom season, but from 1930 onwards, the BBC provided the orchestra.[8]

The inadequacy of the BBC's players, and also of the established London orchestras, was shown up by the Berlin Philharmonic, under Wilhelm Furtwängler, in two concerts in 1927. A historian of the Queen's Hall, Robert Elkin, writes, "At this period the standard of orchestral playing in London was distinctly low, and the well-drilled efficiency of the Berliners under their dynamic conductor came as something of a revelation."[9] These, and later concerts by the same orchestra, gained plaudits from the public and music critics at the expense of the London orchestras. The chief music critic of The Times, Frank Howes, later commented, "the British public ... was electrified when it heard the disciplined precision of the Berlin Philharmonic. … This apparently was how an orchestra could, and, therefore, ought to sound".[10] After the Berliners, London heard a succession of major foreign orchestras, including the Amsterdam Concertgebouw Orchestra under Willem Mengelberg and the Philharmonic-Symphony Orchestra of New York under Arturo Toscanini.[11]

John Reith, director general of the BBC

Among those determined that London should have a permanent orchestra of similar excellence were Reith and the conductor Sir Thomas Beecham. The latter aimed at setting up a first rate ensemble for opera and concert performances, and though no admirer of broadcasting he was willing to negotiate with the BBC if this gave him what he sought. Reith's concern was that the BBC should have a first-rate radio orchestra. The critic Richard Morrison writes, "Reith's BBC of the 1920s was ... imbued with an almost religious zeal for 'enlightening' the public through the magical medium of the wireless. An orchestra, and particularly one that was unencumbered by commercial constraints and thus free to deliver the highest of highbrow programmes, would fit very well into that idealistic philosophy."[12] Landon Ronald brought Reith and Beecham together in April 1928; negotiations and preliminary arrangements continued for more than 18 months until it became clear that the corporation and the conductor had irreconcilable priorities for the proposed new ensemble.[13] Beecham withdrew and, as described by Nicholas Kenyon:

With the collapse of the Beecham scheme, the way was open for the BBC's music department to design an orchestral scheme truly suited to broadcasting needs – a plan for a 114-piece orchestra that could split into four different smaller groups, which had been devised in the autumn of 1929 by Edward Clark and Julian Herbage – and to place that orchestra's fortunes under the direction of the man who was to guide it with the utmost distinction for the next 20 years, the BBC's new director of music, Adrian Boult.[13]

Foundation

By the time Adrian Boult succeeded Pitt as director of music for the BBC, the violinist Albert Sammons and the violist Lionel Tertis had gone round the country talent-spotting on behalf of the corporation. 27 players had been offered positions in the new orchestra. Under Boult's direction the strength of the orchestra was brought up to 114. Among those who joined were Aubrey Brain, Arthur Catterall, Eugene Cruft, Sidonie Goossens, Lauri Kennedy and Frederick Thurston. Although many of the principals were stars recruited from the LSO, the Hallé and other orchestras, a high proportion of the rank and file members were fresh from music colleges.[14] Boult wrote, "a brilliant group of young and inexperienced players came to sit behind the well-known old stagers."[15]

panel of eight small photographs of men's portraits dating from the decades around 1900
Guest conducting the BBC SO in the 1930s: from top left, clockwise, Beecham, Koussevitzky, Mengelberg, Richard Strauss, Toscanini, Walter, Webern, Weingartner

A substantial number of the players performed at the 1930 Promenade Concerts under Sir Henry Wood,[16] and the full BBC Symphony Orchestra gave its first concert on 22 October 1930, conducted by Boult at the Queen's Hall. The programme consisted of music by Wagner, Brahms, Saint-Saëns and Ravel.[17] Of the 21 programmes in the orchestra's first season, Boult conducted nine and Wood five.[n 2]

The reviews of the new orchestra were enthusiastic. The Times wrote of its "virtuosity" and of Boult's "superb" conducting.[19] The Musical Times commented, "The boast of the B.B.C. that it intended to get together a first-class orchestra was not an idle one", spoke of "exhilaration" at the playing", and called another concert later in the season "an occasion for national pride".[20] The Observer called the playing "altogether magnificent".[21] After the initial concerts Reith was told by his advisers that the orchestra had played better for Boult than anyone else. Reith asked him if he wished to take on the chief conductorship, and if so whether he would resign as director of music or occupy both posts simultaneously. Boult opted for the latter.[17]

During the 1930s, the orchestra became renowned for its high standard of playing and for performing new and unfamiliar music. The pioneering work of Boult and the BBC SO included an early performance of Schoenberg's Variations, Op. 31, British premieres, including Berg's Wozzeck and Three Movements from the Lyric Suite,[22] and world premieres, including Vaughan Williams's Symphony No. 4 in F minor[23] and Bartók's Concerto for Two Pianos and Orchestra.[22] Anton Webern conducted eight BBC SO concerts between 1931 and 1936.[24]

During the 1930s the orchestra presented rarely-heard large-scale works from the past, including Berlioz's Grande Messe des morts and Grande symphonie funèbre et triomphale.[25] Mahler's Eighth and Ninth Symphonies, and Purcell's King Arthur.[26]

The excellence of the orchestra attracted leading international conductors. In its second season guest conductors included Richard Strauss, Felix Weingartner and Bruno Walter,[27] followed, in later seasons, by Serge Koussevitzky,[28] Beecham and Mengelberg.[29] Arturo Toscanini, widely regarded at the time as the world's leading conductor, conducted the BBC SO in 1935 and later said that it was the finest he had ever directed.[30] He returned to conduct the orchestra in 1937, 1938 and 1939,[31] and declared, "This is the orchestra I would like to take round the world."[32]

Second World War and postwar

On the outbreak of war in September 1939 the BBC put into effect its contingency plans to minimise disruption of broadcasting. The corporation withdrew from responsibility for the Proms, with which Wood went ahead, backed by the Royal Philharmonic Society, with the LSO replacing the BBC SO.[33] The BBC SO was relocated from London to Bristol. More than 40 players were released for active service, including the 30 youngest members; the orchestra was reduced to a complement of 70, although it was increased to 90 later in the war.[34] During 1940 and 1941 Bristol suffered devastation from German air-raids, and the BBC decided to move the orchestra again. In September 1941 the BBC SO took up residence in Bedford, where it remained, giving live broadcasts and making recordings until it returned permanently to its London base at the BBC's Maida Vale studios in 1945.[35] The BBC resumed its support for the Proms in 1942, with the BBC SO returning temporarily to London during the Proms seasons of 1942–45.[36] For the rest of the year, the orchestra played in the hall of Bedford School, and after the launch of the V-1 raids in 1944 the remaining broadcast concerts of that year's Proms season were performed at the Bedford Corn Exchange.[37]

Boult had striven to maintain the orchestra's standards and prestige during the war; as an instance of its prowess in the 1940s Kennedy cites an HMV recording of Elgar's Second Symphony released in January 1945: "a performance that blazed with excitement and passion and is documentary evidence of the excellence of the orchestra in 1944".[38] With Reith long gone from the post of director general Boult found that the top management of the BBC was less concerned for the status of its Symphony Orchestra. The new director general, Sir William Haley, was unwilling to approve the funding needed to keep the orchestra competitive with new rivals – Walter Legge's Philharmonia and Beecham's Royal Philharmonic.[39] Some younger players felt that many BBC SO principals were past their best.[40] There were even a few members of the BBC's staff who were not sorry when Steuart Wilson, a BBC executive with a private grudge against Boult, engineered Boult's retirement in 1950,[41] though many profoundly regretted it.[42] Wilson had neglected to secure a successor of similar eminence to take over the orchestra. His efforts to recruit Sir John Barbirolli and Rafael Kubelík were unsuccessful,[43] and he was obliged to offer the post to his third choice, Sir Malcolm Sargent, on whatever terms Sargent demanded.[44]

1950s

Sargent, an immensely popular figure with the public, was not at all popular with orchestral players, because of what a historian of the Proms has called his "autocratic and prima-donna attitude towards orchestral players".[45] He offended the BBC SO players by demanding that they all stand up when he came on to the platform – which they firmly declined to do.[45] He rapidly became equally unpopular with the BBC music department, ignoring its agenda and pursuing his own.[45] He refused to join the staff of the BBC, and insisted on remaining a freelance, taking numerous external engagements to the detriment of his work with the BBC SO.[46] A senior BBC manager wrote, "Except when a Barbirolli or a Kletzki has been in charge for a few days, the Orchestra is inferior, as an artistic instrument, to the Hallé or Philharmonia. … [Sargent] is indifferent to the morale and welfare of the Orchestra and to the individual temperaments of his players as artists or as human beings."[47] It did not help that Sargent was universally acknowledged to be at his finest in choral music.[48] His reputation in big works for chorus and orchestra such as The Dream of Gerontius and Belshazzar's Feast was unrivalled, and his large-scale performances of Handel oratorios were assured packed houses. However, his regular programming of such works did nothing to lift the spirits of the BBC SO: orchestral musicians regarded playing the instrumental accompaniment for large choirs as drudgery.[49]

In the 1950s the BBC SO, in common with the rest of the BBC's musical organisation, suffered from stagnation. In the words of the critic Peter Heyworth, "the Corporation's music department had become a byword for its narrow-mindedness and lassitude".[50] Boult had been followed as director of music by a series of successors between 1944 and 1959 who either lacked his commitment to modern music or were actively hostile to it. Richard Howgill, who held the post from 1952 to 1959, took the view that although Webern "might have been a small composer of some significance, Schoenberg wasn't really a composer at all."[50] In addition to working under a conductor it disliked, the BBC SO found its role as a pioneer of progressive music gone, and its performances of the standard classics criticised as under-rehearsed (particularly during Proms seasons) compared with those given by Legge's Philharmonia and others.[50] Sargent's contract was not renewed in 1957, although he continued with undiminished popularity as chief conductor of the Proms until his death ten years later. Howgill appointed Rudolf Schwarz as chief conductor of the BBC SO. Schwarz failed to restore orchestral standards to pre-war levels, and lacked Sargent's box-office appeal.[50] Under Schwarz, BBC SO concerts other than the Proms drew poor houses – as low as 29 per cent of capacity in the 1959–60 season.[51] The manager of the Royal Festival Hall, Ernest Bean, spoke of "an inherited aura of mediocrity about BBC concerts which keeps people away".[51] Schwarz's five-year contract was not renewed when it expired.[52]

1960s to 1980s

In 1959 William Glock was appointed controller of music for the BBC, and the profile and fortunes of the BBC SO began to rise. For the post of principal conductor Glock engaged Antal Doráti, who, in Heyworth's judgment, "raised standards of playing and brought new vigour to the programmes" in his four years in charge (1962–66).[50] Doráti was convinced that the orchestra was stultified by concentrating on studio broadcasts, as it did except during the Proms season. He strove to free players from "slavery to the microphone", and Glock promoted a regular series of concerts at the Festival Hall.[53] The music critic Tom Sutcliffe later wrote that Doráti and his successors, Colin Davis (1967–71), Pierre Boulez (1971–75) and Gennady Rozhdestvensky (1978–81) had been partly successful in improving playing standards, but had not the brought the orchestra up to its original level of distinction.[54]

By 1962 Glock had persuaded the management of the BBC to increase the orchestra's budget to allow for joint principals in the string sections, to attract top musicians who could play in the BBC SO without having to give up their solo or chamber careers.[55] The following season he was able to engage joint principals for the wind section; he recruited such star players as Jack Brymer and Terence MacDonagh, formerly members of Beecham's celebrated "Royal Family" in the RPO.[56] The problem remained for rank-and-file string players that though the BBC offered secure employment and a pension it did not pay as well as its London rivals.[57] After 1964 the BBC SO was the only one of the five London symphony orchestras that was not self-governed,[n 3] and some musicians felt that the BBC SO's constitution as a body of salaried employees, with no say in the management or repertory of the orchestra, attracted an unadventurous type of player. A former member of the BBC SO said in 1979, "I felt I was getting too secure … [in] the BBC Symphony you can be a poor player, but if you're on time and never moan at the conductor … you'll have no trouble. … I think the BBC Symphony lost some good young players because the management got their priorities wrong."[59]

Glock was well known as a proponent of avant garde music; earlier in his career he had been dismissed as music critic of The Observer for such views as "no great composer has ever cared how 'pleasant' his music sounds".[60] Under his administration, the BBC SO gave world premieres of works by composers including Roberto Gerhard, Peter Maxwell Davies and Michael Tippett, and UK premieres of works by, among others, Luciano Berio, Pierre Boulez and Edgard Varèse.[61] The policy of commissioning works, and giving UK premieres of new compositions was continued under Glock's successors. World or UK premieres in the 1970s included works by Elliott Carter, György Ligeti, Witold Lutosławski, Olivier Messiaen, Luigi Nono, Arvo Pärt and Karlheinz Stockhausen.[62] BBC commissions premiered by the BBC SO in the 1980s included Alfred Schnittke's Second Symphony, Harrison Birtwistle's Earth Dances, and John Tavener's The Protecting Veil.[63]

Although Glock restored the orchestra's reputation as Britain's leading modern music ensemble, the balance of programming affected the players' capacity in the mainstream repertoire. The principal horn, Alan Civil, recalled, "We did about eighty percent modern and twenty percent classical. The awful tragedy, for the orchestra, was that eventually we were not able to play the standard classics. We could sight-read the most fearsome contemporary piece, but a Brahms symphony – embarrassing!"[64] The bassoon player William Waterhouse who joined the BBC SO from the LSO found the BBC's repertory refreshing, but the music making less impressive: "There were no potboilers, but also, I'm afraid, no world-ranking soloists either."[65]

John Pritchard was principal conductor from 1982 to 1989. In The Times, Paul Griffiths wrote, "Sir John's seven-year period with the orchestra has been marked by growing orchestral confidence and many memorable performances."[66] Principal guest conductors in the 1970s and 80s included Sir Charles Mackerras (1977–79), Michael Gielen (1978–81), Günter Wand, Mark Elder (1982–85) and Peter Eötvös (1985–88).

1990s and 21st century

Pritchard's successor was Andrew Davis (1989–2000), who was the longest-serving chief conductor since Boult.[67] He was at the helm for what John Allison in The Times called "the valuable Barbican weekends that each January investigate another major but not fully understood 20th-century composer."[68] Noting that modern music was central to the work of Davis and the orchestra, Allison added that under Davis the orchestra took part in "once-in-a-lifetime projects such as Anthony Payne's completion of Elgar's Third Symphony."[68] Such was Davis's contribution to the orchestra that when he resigned he was appointed its first conductor laureate.[67]

Leonard Slatkin

In 2000, Davis was succeeded by Leonard Slatkin, whose relationship with the players was uneasy, and whose repertoire was not generally liked by the orchestra or the audiences; he was felt to emphasise twentieth century American music at the expense of cutting-edge modern works and the central European classics.[69] When his departure was announced in 2004 the BBC had not found a replacement. There was speculation that the successor would be Jukka-Pekka Saraste, Donald Runnicles or David Robertson,[70] but the post went to Jiří Bělohlávek. He was well known to the players, having been the orchestra's principal guest conductor in the 1990s.[71] The classical repertory was regarded as one of Bělohlávek's strengths, but he had no reputation for conducting avant garde works, which remained a core part of the orchestra's remit. He welcomed the fact that the orchestra's new principal guest conductor was David Robertson, a new-music expert and a protégé of Boulez.[71] The orchestra was seen by some as "a bolshie lot" and "grumpy", but its relations with Bělohlávek were harmonious.[71] Under Bělohlávek the orchestra won glowing reviews: The Times referred to its "superb musicians",[72] Michael Kennedy in The Sunday Telegraph referred to a "rich and opulent [score] magnificently played by the BBC Symphony Orchestra" under Bělohlávek,[73] and another Telegraph critic praised the BBC SO's "virtuoso form".[74]

Principal guest conductors during these years were Alexander Lazarev (1992–95), Bělohlávek (1995–2000) and Jukka-Pekka Saraste (2002–05). It was announced in 2012 that Sakari Oramo would take over as chief conductor in 2013.[75]. In 2012, Semyon Bychkov assumed a newly-created position in the orchestra, the Günter Wand Conducting Chair.[76]

The BBC SO is the associate orchestra of the Barbican Centre in London, where it gives an annual season of concerts. These seasons include series of concerts devoted to individual modern composers including John Cage, James MacMillan, Elliott Carter Sofia Gubaidulina and Michael Tippett.[77][78]

The orchestra remains the principal orchestra of the Proms, giving about a dozen concerts each season, including the first and last nights.[78] Most of its concerts are broadcast on BBC Radio 3, streamed online and available as podcasts for a week after broadcast, and a number are televised: the orchestra's website claims that this gives the BBC "the highest broadcast profile of any UK orchestra".[77] The orchestra continues to make studio recordings for Radio 3 at the Maida Vale studios; some recording sessions are free for the public to attend.[77]

In common with other orchestras, the BBC SO engages in educational work. According to the orchestra's website: "Among ongoing projects are the BBC SO Family Music Intro scheme, introducing families to live classical music, BBC SO Student Zone and the highly successful BBC SO Family Orchestra, alongside work in local schools. Total Immersion composer events also provide rich material for education work."[77]

In 2000, the orchestra appointed its first associate composer, Mark-Anthony Turnage. John Adams became the BBC Symphony Orchestra's artist in association in June 2003. The composer and conductor Oliver Knussen took up the post of artist in association in July 2009.[79]

Recordings

From its first years the BBC SO was active in commercial recording studios. Under Boult it recorded a wide range of music from Bach to Mozart and Beethoven, Brahms, Wagner and Elgar. In the 1950s and 60s it recorded a range of music with Sargent, mostly British but with several Sibelius discs in addition. With Doráti the orchestra made recordings of works by Bartók, Gerhard and Messaien. Under Colin Davis it made its first opera sets: Mozart's Idomeneo and The Marriage of Figaro, and Berlioz's Benvenuto Cellini, as well as works by Beethoven and Tippett. Under Boulez the orchestra recorded mostly twentieth century music – works by Bartók, Berg, Schoenberg and Boulez himself, and also Berlioz.[80] Andrew Davis has recorded extensively with the orchestra for the Teldec label and others.[81] Under Bělohlávek the orchestra has recorded Martinů's The Epic of Gilgamish.[82]

With guest conductors the BBC SO has recorded Elgar and Vaughan Williams under the composers, Beethoven under Toscanini, Bruno Walter and Barbirolli, and Sibelius under Beecham and Koussevitsky.[80]

Archive recordings of many live concerts by the BBC SO have been released on the BBC's own label.

Notes and references

Notes
  1. ^ Despite the efforts of Sir Henry Wood, Sir Thomas Beecham and others, the "deputy system" remained a traditional part of the London orchestral scene. A player booked for a concert could accept a better-paid engagement and send a substitute in his stead. The treasurer of the Royal Philharmonic Society described the system thus: "A, whom you want, signs to play at your concert. He sends B (whom you don't mind) to the first rehearsal. B, without your knowledge or consent, sends C to the second rehearsal. Not being able to play at the concert, C sends D, whom you would have paid five shillings to stay away."[6]
  2. ^ The other concerts were divided between Ansermet, Hermann Scherchen, Oskar Fried, Landon Ronald and Albert Coates[18]
  3. ^ The LSO had been self-governing from its foundation in 1904, and the other three followed suit when their founders withdrew (or died): the LPO in 1940, the RPO in 1961 and the (New) Philharmonia in 1964.[58]
References
  1. ^ "Broadcasting". The Times: p. 8. 21 July 1923. {{cite journal}}: |pages= has extra text (help); "Broadcasting". The Times: p. 6. 25 August 1923. {{cite journal}}: |pages= has extra text (help); "Broadcasting". The Times: p. 8. 1 December 1923. {{cite journal}}: |pages= has extra text (help)
  2. ^ a b c Kennedy, p. 137
  3. ^ "Symphony Concert by Wireless". The Times: p. 10. 2 October 1923. {{cite journal}}: |pages= has extra text (help)
  4. ^ "BBC Symphony Concert". The Times: p. 8. 23 February 1924. {{cite journal}}: |pages= has extra text (help) (Pitt); "BBC Symphony Concert". The Times: p. 8. 23 February 1924. {{cite journal}}: |pages= has extra text (help); "British Broadcasting Company's Concer". The Times: p. 8. 8 March 1924. {{cite journal}}: |pages= has extra text (help) (Ronald); "Concerts &c". The Times: 10. 17 March 1924. (Goossens); "Concerts &c". The Times: p. 10. 7 April 1924. {{cite journal}}: |pages= has extra text (help) (Harty); and "Music This Week". The Times: p. 8. 28 April 1924. {{cite journal}}: |pages= has extra text (help) (Elgar)
  5. ^ Kennedy, p. 138
  6. ^ Levien, John Mewburn, quoted in Reid, p. 50
  7. ^ "The B.B.C." The Musical Times: p. 70. 1 January 1928. {{cite journal}}: |pages= has extra text (help) (subscription required)
  8. ^ Cox, p. 91
  9. ^ Elkin, p. 93
  10. ^ Quoted in Elkin, p. 49
  11. ^ Patmore, David (2001). "EMI, Sir Thomas Beecham, and the formation of the London Philharmonic Orchestra". ARSC Journal, 32(1): pp. 11–27. {{cite journal}}: |pages= has extra text (help) (subscription required)
  12. ^ Morrison, p. 72
  13. ^ a b Kenyon, Nicholas (1 October 1980). "Beecham and the BBC Symphony Orchestra: A Collaboration that Never Happened". The Musical Times: pp. 625–628. {{cite journal}}: |pages= has extra text (help) (subscription required)
  14. ^ Morrison, p. 73
  15. ^ Boult, p. 97
  16. ^ "The Promenade Concerts" The Observer, 20 July 1930, p. 12
  17. ^ a b Boult, p. 99
  18. ^ "London Concerts". The Musical Times: p. 935. 1 October 1930. {{cite journal}}: |pages= has extra text (help) (subscription required)
  19. ^ "Music". The Musical Times: p. 12. 23 October 1930. {{cite journal}}: |pages= has extra text (help)
  20. ^ "London Concerts". The Musical Times: pp. 1124–1127. 1 December 1930. {{cite journal}}: |pages= has extra text (help) (subscription required)
  21. ^ "Music". The Observer: p. 14. 26 October 1930. {{cite journal}}: |pages= has extra text (help) (subscription required)
  22. ^ a b Cummings, David (May 1989). "Boult's premières: Problems of Musical Lexicography". The Musical Times: pp. 272–275. {{cite journal}}: |pages= has extra text (help) (subscription required)
  23. ^ Boult, pp. 186–87
  24. ^ Foreman, Lewis (September 1991). "Webern, the BBC and the Berg Violin Concerto". Tempo: pp. 2–11. {{cite journal}}: |pages= has extra text (help) (subscription required)
  25. ^ Elkin, p. 50
  26. ^ Elkin, p. 51
  27. ^ "Music". The Times: p. 8. 27 August 1931. {{cite journal}}: |pages= has extra text (help)
  28. ^ "Music". The Times: p. 8. 10 September 1932. {{cite journal}}: |pages= has extra text (help)
  29. ^ "Music". The Times: p. 10. 11 August 1936. {{cite journal}}: |pages= has extra text (help)
  30. ^ Morrison, p. 74
  31. ^ Boult, p. 102
  32. ^ Glock, p. 104
  33. ^ Doctor, pp. 116 and 121
  34. ^ Kennedy, p. 187
  35. ^ Kennedy, pp. 200–202
  36. ^ Kennedy, p. 197
  37. ^ Doctor, pp. 127–129
  38. ^ Kennedy, pp. 200–201
  39. ^ Briggs, Asa (July 1985). "The BBC Symphony Orchestra: The First Fifty Years 1930-1980 by Nicholas Kenyon". Music & Letters, Vol. 66, No. 3: 256–259. (subscription required)
  40. ^ Aldous, p. 55
  41. ^ Kennedy, pp. 215–219
  42. ^ Briggs, p. 674
  43. ^ Kenyon, pp. 220 (Barbirolli) and 228 (Kubelík)
  44. ^ Aldous, p. 159
  45. ^ a b c Cox, p. 164
  46. ^ Cox, pp. 164–165
  47. ^ Johnstone, Maurice, quoted in Cox, p. 165
  48. ^ Shore, p. 153
  49. ^ Shore, pp. 18–19 and 153
  50. ^ a b c d e Heyworth, Peter (December 1988). "Sir William Glock at 80: A Tribute". Tempo, New Series, No. 167: pp. 19–21. {{cite journal}}: |pages= has extra text (help) (subscription required)
  51. ^ a b Kenyon, p. 292
  52. ^ "Rudolf Schwarz". The Times: p. 19. 14 February 1994. {{cite journal}}: |pages= has extra text (help) (subscription required)
  53. ^ Glock, p. 106
  54. ^ Sutcliffe, Tom (22 October 1980). "The golden mien". The Guardian: p. 12. {{cite journal}}: |pages= has extra text (help)
  55. ^ Glock, p. 105
  56. ^ Kenyon, p. 309
  57. ^ Kenyon. pp. 308–310
  58. ^ Peacock, pp. 8–9
  59. ^ Kettle, Gary, quoted in Previn, p. 89
  60. ^ Kenyon, p. 289
  61. ^ Cox, pp. 283–293 and "History of the Orchestra – 1960s", BBC Symphony Orchestra, accessed 30 July 2012
  62. ^ "History of the Orchestra – 1970s", BBC Symphony Orchestra, accessed 30 July 2012
  63. ^ "History of the Orchestra – 1980s", BBC Symphony Orchestra, accessed 30 July 2012
  64. ^ Civil, Alan, quoted in Previn, p. 180
  65. ^ Morrison, p. 161
  66. ^ Griffiths, Paul (18 September 1989). "Au revoir, but not goodbye". The Times.
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