St George’s Hall to play starring role in this year’s BBC Proms


Return of international orchestras, BBC centenary celebrations and more Proms than ever across the UK


2022 sees the BBC Proms restored to its full eight-week glory:

84 concerts over 57 days with over 3,000 musicians

Friday 15 July – 10 September 2022


  • The 2022 BBC Proms will see the return of international orchestras, including Berliner Philharmoniker led by Kirill Petrenko, the Philadelphia Orchestra led by Yannick Nézet-Séguin and the Australian World Orchestra led by Zubin Mehta.
  • The Proms welcomes the newly formed Ukrainian Freedom Orchestra led by Keri-Lynn Wilson
  • This season will feature large-scale repertoire not heard at the festival since 2019, from Verdi’s Requiem on the First Night of the Proms to Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony performed by the Chineke! Orchestra and Voices under Kevin John Edusei.
  • The festival marks the centenary of the BBC with partnerships with beloved BBC brands, including Radio 1, CBeebies and the Natural History Unit, and a new commission featuring rare BBC archive from acclaimed cult band Public Service Broadcasting.
  • There will be more Proms than ever across the UK from Belfast to Truro, and we launch a major new partnership with Sage Gateshead.
  • A wealth of music from Cynthia Erivo to Amjad Ali Khan, an immersive Prom at club venue, Printworks, and the first ever Gaming Prom.
  • 17 new commissions showcase the extraordinary range of today’s orchestral composers – from Norwegian virtuoso jazz saxophonist Marius Neset’s Geyser, to a major new work by Oscar-winning Joker composer Hildur Guðnadóttir.
  • The Proms continues its commitment to accessible ticket prices with seats from £8.50, half-price tickets for under-18s and Promming day tickets at £6 (all plus booking fees). Over 96,000 tickets will be available for £20 and under.
  • The Last Night of the Proms will be led by Dalia Stasevska featuring star soloists Sheku Kanneh-Mason and Lise Davidsen with a world premiere by James B. Wilson.
  • Every concert is broadcast live on BBC Radio 3 and available on BBC Sounds, and 22 Proms are broadcast on BBC television and BBC iPlayer, including the First Night and Last Night of the Proms.

The 2022 BBC Proms celebrates a homecoming of large-scale orchestral repertoire to the Royal Albert Hall. This year’s festival will feature a programme of a scale not heard at the Proms since 2019: the symphonic music of our past responding vividly to the moment, from Verdi’s Requiem on the First Night of the Proms, to Mahler’s Second Symphony with the London Symphony Orchestra and Sir Simon Rattle, to Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony performed by the Chineke! Orchestra and Chineke! Voices under Kevin John Edusei.

A star-studded roster of soloists including Lise Davidsen, Sheku Kanneh-Mason, Nicola Benedetti, Leif Ove Andsnes, Yuja Wang and Jamie Barton will be joined by celebrated orchestras and ensembles from across the world, including the Berliner Philharmoniker led by Kirill Petrenko, the Philadelphia Orchestra led by Yannick Nézet-Séguin and the Australian World Orchestra led by Zubin Mehta. We also welcome European broadcasting orchestras from Austria, Finland and Germany who join our own BBC Orchestras and Choirs, the beating heart of the Proms.

The Proms welcomes the newly formed Ukrainian Freedom Orchestra as part of a European and US tour this summer. Brought together by the Metropolitan Opera, New York, and the Polish National Opera, the brand-new orchestra led by Canadian-Ukrainian conductor Keri-Lynn Wilson includes recently refugeed Ukrainian musicians, Ukrainian members of European orchestras and some of the top musicians of Kyiv, Lviv, Kharkiv, Odesa and elsewhere in Ukraine. The Ukraine Ministry of Culture is granting a special exemption to military-age male members of orchestras inside the country, enabling them to participate in a remarkable demonstration of the power of art over adversity. Following the inaugural concert in Warsaw the orchestra’s first stop with be in London at the Proms (31 July matinee) ahead of concerts in European destinations including Amsterdam, Berlin, Edinburgh, Hamburg, Munich and Snape Maltings, before culminating with concerts in New York and Washington DC. The Prom will be broadcast on BBC TV.

BBC Radio 3 will once again enable the festival to reach millions of people by broadcasting every Prom live. This year, 22 concerts will be broadcast on TV and BBC iPlayer, from the glittering First Night of the Proms, presented by Clive Myrie, to the world-famous Last Night of the Proms, presented by Katie Derham. TV presenters this year include Clara Amfo, Edith Bowman, Katie Derham, Sian Eleri, Jess Gillam, Georgia Mann, Clive Myrie, Chris Packham and Petroc Trelawny.

This year, the Proms looks back across 100 years of great British broadcasting to commemorate the BBC’s centenary year, and forward to a new generation of music-making, with more than 60 artists making their debuts this summer. In a perfect alignment of values and ambition, the partnership between the nascent BBC and the Proms in 1927 took Sir Henry Wood’s vision of universalising classical music to new heights. In Sir Henry’s words, “With the whole-hearted support of the wonderful medium of broadcasting, I feel that I am at last on the threshold of realising my lifelong ambition of truly democratising the message of music, and making its beneficent effect universal.”

Marking the BBC’s centenary is the world premiere of This New Noise, a multimedia commission from cult band Public Service Broadcasting, featuring rare material from the BBC archives. This year’s festival will also stage a series of concerts in collaboration with beloved BBC brands: Radio 1 Relax, CBeebies and the BBC Natural History Unit for our first ever Earth Prom presented by Chris Packham, exploring the work of the NHU who first broadcast David Attenborough’s earliest adventures.

The Proms continues to explore new genres and venues. Stand-out moments include a genre-defying Prom in the spectacular space of Printworks London, printing plant turned club venue, which will host an immersive spectacle of music, dance, theatre, video, audio soundscapes and haute couture featuring contrasting works by Philip Glass and Handel. This year’s festival will also stage the first ever Gaming Prom: From 8-Bit to Infinity, presented by the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra under Robert Ames, who will explore the sound-worlds of video games; a Prom dedicated to the musical genius of Aretha Franklin, Queen of Soul; a showcase of South African jazz, featuring Mercury Prize-nominated singer ESKA and double MOBO Award-winning saxophonist Soweto Kinch; and Proms debuts from stars across a wide range of genres, including Tony, Grammy and Emmy award-winning singer Cynthia Erivo, and Indian sarod maestro Amjad Ali Khan. To mark the Queen’s Platinum Jubilee, the BBC Concert Orchestra will present a Prom celebrating the long and fruitful relationship between music and monarchy from Handel’s Water Music to a new commission from British composer Cheryl Frances-Hoad.

The season culminates in the celebratory Last Night of the Proms with the BBC Symphony Orchestra and Chorus and BBC Singers. This year’s festival finale is led by Dalia Stasevska, who is joined by star soloists Sheku Kanneh-Mason and Lise Davidsen, with a world premiere by fast-rising British composer James B. Wilson.

David Pickard, Director, BBC Proms, says: “It is a momentous year for the world’s largest classical music festival. I’m delighted that large-scale orchestral and choral repertoire will once again be heard in the Royal Albert Hall, and that we can celebrate the return of international orchestras. In the BBC’s centenary year, we can be proud that the Proms has been a part of the organisation for 95 of those 100 years, playing a key role in the Corporation’s mission to inform, educate and entertain. After two adapted seasons, we look forward to welcoming audiences back this summer for eight glorious weeks of music making.”

Bringing the joy of classical music to as wide an audience as possible remains an integral part of the Proms’ mission. For the first time ever, the Proms is taking its successful chamber music series, established in 1996, across the UK, visiting all four nations. An array of world-class soloists and ensembles will perform repertoire ranging from Haydn to Xenakis in Belfast, Birmingham, Bristol, Cardiff, Glasgow, Liverpool, London and Truro. The Proms is also delighted to announce a new partnership with Sage Gateshead, which will host a main-evening Prom conducted by Dinis Sousa with the Royal Northern Sinfonia, joined by members of folk ensemble Spell Songs and a large-scale choir of young singers from across the North-East, Voices of the River’s Edge, who have been brought together specially for this concert.

Throughout its 127-year history, the Proms has been at the forefront of musical innovation. This year, the festival will premiere 24 new works, 17 of which are commissioned by the BBC. New music highlights include a major new work by Oscar-winning Joker composer Hildur Guðnadóttir, a new harp concerto by Sally Beamish, an elementally charged new work from Anna Thorvaldsdottir entitled ARCHORA, and the world premiere of Geyser by Norwegian virtuoso jazz saxophonist Marius Neset.

The 2022 Proms marks the 150th anniversary of Ralph Vaughan Williams’s birth. Popular favourites such as the soaring The Lark Ascending and the haunting Tallis-inspired Fantasia will take their place alongside the visceral Fourth Symphony and the rarely heard concertos for oboe and tuba. Other composer anniversaries include César Franck at 200, Iannis Xenakis at 100, George Walker at 100 and British composer Doreen Carwithen at 100, part of the Proms’ ongoing initiative to celebrate and showcase female pioneers from the past. The 2022 Proms also shines a spotlight on the extraordinary musical life of Ethel Smyth, whose ‘March of the Women’ was premiered at the Royal Albert Hall in 1911 and became the anthem of the Suffragette movement.

This season, the Proms looks beyond the piano and violin to concertos that spotlight more unusual ‘Cinderella’ instruments. This strand will feature concertos for theremin, tuba, flute, oboe, horn, viola, harp, percussion, trombone and brass band – highlighting both the instruments and the individual players who have championed them. Many make their Proms debut as soloists, including trombonist Peter Moore and Caroline Eyck, one of the world’s foremost theremin players.

Alan Davey, Controller, BBC Radio 3, BBC Proms, BBC Orchestras and Choirs, says: “Last year marked an early and significant coming-together for audiences and artists alike, despite uncertainty as to the continuing impact of the Covid-19 pandemic. This year we want audiences everywhere to know that the joy and communion of live music-making is back. With more ways than ever for people to enjoy the events in person, on radio, television and online, the BBC’s on-going commitment to running the biggest classical music festival in the world allows the Proms to be one of the most inclusive musical experiences anywhere. Every concert can be heard on Radio 3 and BBC Sounds, and 22 can be seen on TV and BBC iPlayer too.”


More Information: Proms At: Liverpool


BBC Proms comes to St George’s Hall Liverpool on Monday 22 August at 1.00pm. Performance information:

  • Carwithen: String Quartet No. 2
  • Brahms: String Quartet in A minor, Op. 51 No. 2

Performed by Dudok Quartet Amsterdam.

Tickets go on sale from 9am on Saturday 21 May.

For further information, please visit bbc.co.uk/proms.

Back to news articles