At the end of their BBC Proms concert, conductor Charles Dutoit presented his bouquet to a member of the second violins, buried in the belly of the orchestra. Louis Lanza, 75, had decided to retire after almost half a century in the band, putting himself automatically into slipped disc‘s hall of fame as one of the longest serving orchestral players of all time.

Lanza was part of a Philly musical dynasty. His brother, Joe, joined the orchestra in 1958 and played until his death five years ago. “Joe was a very devoted musician,” said Louis Lanza. “He had accumulated 46 weeks of sick leave, but never took off unless he had a high fever. He loved playing, always taking music home to be prepared for rehearsal, and never took time off, even to see a doctor.” Several other family members worked as professional musicians.

Here’s his official orchestra biography:

 

A native Philadelphian, Louis Lanza studied with his uncle, Michael Pascuccio, and Frank Costanzo.  While in high school Mr. Lanza received a scholarship to attend the Philadelphia Conservatory of Music, which later merged into the University of the Arts.  After graduating from high school, he received a four-year Board of Education Scholarship and entered the Juilliard School where he studied under Edouard Dethier, and took chamber music classes from Hans Lety, Robert Hoff, and Dorothy DeLay.

Following graduation from Juilliard, Mr. Lanza enlisted and served three years in the U.S. Army Band in Washington, D.C., recording many radio broadcasts with popular singer Steve Lawrence.  After being honorably discharged from the Army, Mr. Lanza played for three years in the first violin section of the National Symphony and in 1964 was reunited with his late brother, Joseph, in the violin section of The Philadelphia Orchestra.  For many years, Mr. Lanza was principal second violin of the Reading Symphony, the Trenton Symphony, and the Amerita Chamber Orchestra.

Mr. Lanza made frequent solo appearances with his late wife, Joan Trombetta Lanza, a pianist and singer.  They later formed Lanza Family Presents, giving concerts in schools and elsewhere featuring Joan Lanza (piano and voice); their son, Lou, a popular and jazz singer (violin and voice); and daughter, Cara, who has a Ph.D. in clinical psychology (piano and voice).

Say what you like about Rupert Murdoch’s Currant Bun, but sometimes it nails the issue with unerring precision. Most media today wittered sympathy for the paltry fine let-off awarded to the loudmouth racist. Not The Sun:

Dior havin’ a laugh

£20m Galliano fined £2.64 for racist rants

Racist rant ... John Galliano

By NICK PARKER, Chief Foreign Correspondent, and DAN SALES

Published: Today

DISGRACED Dior designer John Galliano was let off yesterday over his vile anti-Jewish and racist rants.

A French court convicted the 50-year-old fashion guru — caught raging on a Sun video — but ordered him to pay just one euro (88p) to his three victims. That is £2.64 in total.

 

 

 

 

Galliano, sacked as Dior’s chief designer over the scandal, was convicted of “casting public insults based on origin, religious affiliation or ethnicity” following two ugly incidents in a chic Paris bar.

He could have been jailed for six months and fined £20,000.

Roger Wright last night announced the new heights attained by this season’s Proms.

Contrary to expectations, in a summer without the Berlin or Vienna Philharmoic, the Concertgebouw, Cleveland and other big bangers, attendances actually rose to a record 94%. That’s 2% up on 2010, 3% up on 2009.

More than 300,000 people attended classical concerts over seven weeks.

52 out of 74 concerts were totally sold out. Two million watched one of the concerts on BBC2 television.

The downside? There isn’t one.

But just wait for next year when the Proms meet the Olympic Games.

Photo of Proms Controller Roger Wright

Here’s today’s press release:

Picture (Metafile)

Press information issued 9 September 2011

Record-breaking season for BBC Proms 2011

  • 94% average attendance for main evening concerts in Royal Albert Hall
  • 52 of 74 concerts in the Royal Albert Hall sold out
  • Over 300,000 attend the 86 concerts in the Royal Albert Hall and Cadogan Hall

As the 117th season of BBC Proms approaches the world-famous Last Night of the Proms on Saturday, Roger Wright, Controller, BBC Radio 3 and Director, BBC Proms, announces that it has been a record-breaking season.

Average attendance for the main evening Proms in the Royal Albert Hall this year was 94%, compared with 92% in 2010. 52 of 74 concerts in the Royal Albert Hall sold out, three more than the previous year. With two concerts to go, over 300,000 people have already attended concerts at both the Royal Albert Hall and Cadogan Hall.

Over 36,000 people bought tickets for the first time and more than 5,000 under 16s attended concerts across the season, not including the free sold out Horrible Histories Prom aimed at families. Record numbers of tickets were sold on the first day of sales with over 87,000 tickets purchased. 

Roger Wright, Director BBC Proms, says:
I’m delighted that the 2011 BBC Proms have been so successful with audiences, particularly given the large amount of new and unfamiliar music in the broad range of programming. The strong attendance figures are a testament to the adventurous spirit of the Proms audiences, their continuing eagerness to embrace such a wide range of music and the great value for money which the Proms offers thanks to the ongoing commitment of the BBC.”

The festival continues to offer low ticket prices, broad programming and creative use of interactive technology, this year doubling the number of BBC Proms social media followers. The Proms offers an extensive learning programme with a rich offering of daily pre-concert and participatory events to enrich the audience’s experience and reach new and young attenders. Sir Henry Wood, founder-conductor of the Proms, believed in making the best-quality classical music available to the widest possible audience and that ambition remains central to the BBC Proms today.

Coverage on BBC television built on the new initiatives that were introduced in 2010, with context and presentation focussing on the musicians themselves and the stories behind the music. Katie Derham has been the face of the Proms on BBC TWO for the second year and the BBC FOUR Proms have been led on screen by Charles Hazlewood, Suzy Klein and Petroc Trelawny. Concerts will have been broadcast across BBC ONE, BBC TWO, BBC FOUR, CBBC, BBC HD and all services are available to listen and watch again on bbc.co.uk/proms and via the BBC iPlayer. With two major television broadcasts still to come, viewing figures are strong and will be announced in full next week.

BBC Radio 3 broadcasts every Proms programme live, with an ambitious range of contextual programming around the music, including many of the Proms Plus events as well as interviews, talks, essays and features. For the first time this year Radio 3 has offered a downloadable Proms Music Guide in which a number of the station’s presenters introduce a work featured in the Proms concert of the day, creating an indispensable guide to some of the best loved music in the classical repertoire

The BBC Proms remains committed to new music with 12 world premieres including nine of the 11 major BBC commissions, and a further 14 key premieres this season.

Highlights of the season included the return of Gustavo Dudamel and the Simón Bolívar Symphony Orchestra, two Brahms concerts with Bernard Haitink and the Chamber Orchestra of Europe, two concerts with the Budapest Festival Orchestra and its founding conductor Iván Fischer, Late Night solo Bach recital by violinist Nigel Kennedy, the free family Horrible Histories Prom and the first ever Comedy Prom, hosted by comedian and pianist Tim Minchin. The opening weekend included the first Proms performance of Havergal Brian’s gargantuan ‘The Gothic’ Symphony, featuring the combined forces of around 1,000 performers, while a focus on film music saw the return of John Wilson and his renowned Orchestra, as well as the debut of the inimitable Spaghetti Western Orchestra. Other visiting orchestras included the Pittsburgh Symphony and Philadelphia Orchestra.

For further press information please contact Rebecca Driver or Camilla Thornton 020 7765 4714; rebecca.driver@bbc.co.uk; camilla.thornton@bbc.co.uk

Notes to Editors
The 2011 Proms included 74 concerts in the Royal Albert Hall, 12 Chamber Music Proms and Saturday Matinee concerts at Cadogan hall, and five Last Night of the Proms celebrations across the UK. There were a further 80 Proms Plus events – talks, workshops, free performances and activities – offering extra context and insight to audiences on every one of the 59 days of the season.

The 2012 BBC Proms run from Friday 13 July to Saturday 8 September.

Booking information online at bbc.co.uk/proms 

Today’s Jewish Chronicle breaks the news that a player in the LPO has been suspenced by the orchestra after she launched a diatribe against three Israel Philharmonic musicians during a pre-Proms event last week.

The player has not been named, and I see no reason here to add to her punishment, already severe.

In the same issue of the JC, I amplify my own position on the single-issue sympathy tourists – Jews who, after one carefully guided visit to the West Bank adopt the view that Israel is the root of all evil. Read it here.