Did Britain cheat Europe to build its best concert hall?

Did Britain cheat Europe to build its best concert hall?

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norman lebrecht

June 23, 2014

That’s the thesis of Terry Grimley’s new book about the building of Symphony Hall, Birmingham.

The European Commission had told the city that its Regional Development Fund could not be used to build a concert hall. So they called it a convention centre. And Europe turned a blind eye. Details here.

birm

 

Comments

  • anonymus says:

    So in short there is only one very good concert hall in Britain, and it was built with money from the EU. Oh Britannia…

  • Halldor says:

    Symphony Hall is part of a larger convention centre and is regularly used for conventions as well as concerts (including major party conferences). So there was hardly any real bluff involved, especially as the new concert hall was being publicly discussed (eg in Nicholas Kenyon’s Rattle biography) as such as early as 1988 (it didn’t open until 1991).

    I think last week was a bit of a quiet news week on the Birmingham Post – though to be fair, Terry’s a good egg and his book deserves to sell well.

  • Branimir Pofuk says:

    It seems to me that there is only one obvious, alarming and disturbing question raised by this article: why the Regional Development Fund could not be used to build a concert hall?

  • anonymus says:

    To me the more obvious, alarming and disturbing question raised by this is: why is Britain not willing to spend its own money for a concert hall? There seems to be a systemic problem, also looking at the whole country including London. No wonder Simon Rattle prefers to stay in Berlin even after his job ends there…

    • Anne says:

      “why is Britain not willing to spend its own money for a concert hall?”

      The attitude that undermined plans for the Cardiff Bay Opera House is probably a factor.

  • In Britain, people don’t like music but they do like the sound it makes.

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