Adoring and knowledgeable fans, lots of good humour and a tendency to wear silly hats: this description could fit any Proms audience, but Prom 2 was not quite the usual Prom. For one thing, the silly hats were mostly fezzes, and the audience’s expert knowledge extended to being able to identify the weird alien life forms that had invaded the Royal Albert Hall. Yes, this was the Doctor Who Prom, celebrating 50 years of the hugely popular BBC TV series. I’m a little hazy when it comes to alien-spotting, but I cunningly took my eight-year old son Edmund along to help, so I asked him to describe the concert.
The music was quite fast, sometimes jolly and sometimes serious. There were some pieces from the older series of Doctor Who but most of it came from the last couple of years and was all composed by Murray Gold. They also included some classical music pieces by Bach, Debussy and Bizet that had been used in the series. The classical bits reminded me that all music is related and I could see the connection between Bach and a modern composer like Murray Gold.My favourite part was the piece called Cyber Shard because it was quite fast and had lots of different parts all going on together. I liked the way that Murray Gold used all the different parts of the orchestra at different times to create different effects.
In the second half of the concert there were two pieces that were the winners of a Doctor Who “Create a Soundtrack” competition for schoolchildren. They were very advanced pieces of music and I thought it was inspiring to hear music written by children.
It wasn’t like a normal classical concert because there was a lot of interaction with the audience and people clapped and cheered while the music was playing. It must have been hard for the orchestra to concentrate so I think they did very well. I liked Kerry Ingram, the little girl who sang the solo in The Rings of Akhaten – in that episode the girl was frightened of singing but I don’t think Kerry Ingram was scared at all.
Murray Gold writes music to match the grand gestures of Doctor Who: loud and colourful, with grand chorus backings and the crystal clear tones of guest soprano Elin Manahan Thomas wafting ethereally above. I am the Doctor, the theme for the current (eleventh) Doctor, is absolutely thrilling, its jerky rhythm perfectly capturing the manic aspect that actor Matt Smith brings to the role. The suite of music for the Doctor’s recent female companions nicely portrayed the characteristics of each, particularly the swinging jazz-inspired passage for Donna Noble. Gold’s music works brilliantly for television, but the final piece, Song for Fifty (a birthday anthem for the Doctor), composed as a standalone piece for this occasion, was unfortunately an overly-long jumbled mess.