Live at the BBC Proms: The National Youth Orchestra perform Star Wars

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What do you get when the 160 strong National Youth Orchestra take the stage at the Royal Albert Hall? You get these incredible artists performing a new suite from Star Wars by John Williams, Holst’s The Planets and more. Check out the post below, and if you’re able to access the BBC iPlayer, then listen to the NYO perform here.

Live at the BBC Proms: The National Youth Orchestra conducted by Dalia Stasevska perform Holst’s Planets.

Presented by Georgia Mann, live from the Royal Albert Hall, London.

John Williams: Star Wars – suite
Caroline Shaw: The Observatory

c.7.45
Interval: Space: Could Life Exist Beyond Earth? is the title of an exhibition currently running at the Natural History Museum. Curator Caroline Smith shares her interest in meteorites from Mars and the Moon to one which, at 4567 billion years old, is older than our Earth.

c.8.05
Holst: The Planets

National Youth Orchestra
Dalia Stasevska conductor

Britain’s most talented teenagers present a concert of intergalactic musical giants. Expect moons and meteor showers, spaceships, stars and lightsabers from the National Youth Orchestra and Dalia Stasevska.

The many worlds of Holst’s The Planets, including the mysterious beauty of ‘Neptune’ and rousing ‘Jupiter’ theme, meet the music from John Williams’s mighty Star Wars soundtracks, plus Pulitzer Prize-winner Caroline Shaw’s piece inspired by sci-fi and some sky-gazing at the Griffin Observatory in Los Angeles.

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by BBC Radio 3 (@bbcradio3)

SourceBBCSounds
Mark Newbold
Mark Newbold
Exploring the galaxy since 1978, Mark wrote his first fan fiction in '81 and has been a presence online since webpage Fanta War in 1996. He is the EiC and Daily Content Manager of Fantha Tracks and currently contributes to ILM.com, SkywalkerSound.com, Star Wars – Das Offizielle Magazin, Journal of the Whills and Starburst Magazine, having previously contributed to magazines Star Wars Insider, Geeky Monkey, TV Film Memorabilia, Model and Collectors Mart, partworks Build Darth Vader, Star Wars Encyclopedia, and Build The Millennium Falcon, and websites Jedi.net, Jedi News, StarWars.com, Lightsabre.co.uk, and Wirezone. He is the only podcaster to have appeared on every Celebration podcast stage since it began in 2015 (hosting it four times), and is the co-host of Making Tracks, Canon Fodder and Start Your Engines on Fantha Tracks Radio.
- Advertisement -
- Advertisement -

What do you get when the 160 strong National Youth Orchestra take the stage at the Royal Albert Hall? You get these incredible artists performing a new suite from Star Wars by John Williams, Holst’s The Planets and more. Check out the post below, and if you’re able to access the BBC iPlayer, then listen to the NYO perform here.

Live at the BBC Proms: The National Youth Orchestra conducted by Dalia Stasevska perform Holst’s Planets.

Presented by Georgia Mann, live from the Royal Albert Hall, London.

John Williams: Star Wars – suite
Caroline Shaw: The Observatory

c.7.45
Interval: Space: Could Life Exist Beyond Earth? is the title of an exhibition currently running at the Natural History Museum. Curator Caroline Smith shares her interest in meteorites from Mars and the Moon to one which, at 4567 billion years old, is older than our Earth.

c.8.05
Holst: The Planets

National Youth Orchestra
Dalia Stasevska conductor

Britain’s most talented teenagers present a concert of intergalactic musical giants. Expect moons and meteor showers, spaceships, stars and lightsabers from the National Youth Orchestra and Dalia Stasevska.

The many worlds of Holst’s The Planets, including the mysterious beauty of ‘Neptune’ and rousing ‘Jupiter’ theme, meet the music from John Williams’s mighty Star Wars soundtracks, plus Pulitzer Prize-winner Caroline Shaw’s piece inspired by sci-fi and some sky-gazing at the Griffin Observatory in Los Angeles.

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by BBC Radio 3 (@bbcradio3)

SourceBBCSounds
Mark Newbold
Mark Newbold
Exploring the galaxy since 1978, Mark wrote his first fan fiction in '81 and has been a presence online since webpage Fanta War in 1996. He is the EiC and Daily Content Manager of Fantha Tracks and currently contributes to ILM.com, SkywalkerSound.com, Star Wars – Das Offizielle Magazin, Journal of the Whills and Starburst Magazine, having previously contributed to magazines Star Wars Insider, Geeky Monkey, TV Film Memorabilia, Model and Collectors Mart, partworks Build Darth Vader, Star Wars Encyclopedia, and Build The Millennium Falcon, and websites Jedi.net, Jedi News, StarWars.com, Lightsabre.co.uk, and Wirezone. He is the only podcaster to have appeared on every Celebration podcast stage since it began in 2015 (hosting it four times), and is the co-host of Making Tracks, Canon Fodder and Start Your Engines on Fantha Tracks Radio.
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