Horrible Histories Prom


Horrible Histories Prom was a free family concert showcasing the original songs from the British television series Horrible Histories, along with classical music. It was held on 30 July 2011 at the Royal Albert Hall in London, and was that year's children's entry in the BBC's annual Proms series.
Louise Fryer and Rattus Rattus presented the concert for BBC Radio 3. The featured performers were the six-member starring cast of Horrible Histories, supported by the Aurora Orchestra with Nicholas Collon conducting. The Music Centre Children's Choir and Kids Company Choir served as chorus. Orchestral arrangements were made as needed by Iain Farrington.
The 65-minute televised version initially aired the following September. It featured a version of the concert edited to highlight the songs from the TV series, interspersed with snippets of the classical pieces and specially-shot linking sketches set in and around the concert hall, including ones with Rattus Rattus explaining the a historical link to certain pieces.

Setlist

The concert was presented in two parts divided by an interval. As a general theme, songs from the TV series were paired with a classical piece composed in or otherwise relating to that historical era. Various comic interludes spotlighted notable moments in musical history. Several recurring characters and concepts from the series, including reporter Bob Hale, King Henry VIII and the Grim Reaper from "Stupid Deaths", made appearances.

Part 1

  1. "Sunrise " from Also sprach Zarathustra - Richard Strauss
  2. "Horrible Histories Theme Tune"
  3. HHTV News: Bob Hale presents the Orchestra Report
  4. "The 4 Georges: Born 2 Rule"
  5. Interlude: George II discusses the role of the conductor with Nicholas Collon
  6. Danse Macabre - Camille Saint-Saëns
  7. Interlude: A peasant couple offer the latest "scientific" cures for the Black Death
  8. "The Plague Song"
  9. Interlude: Life under the feudal system
  10. "The Truth About Richard III"
  11. "The Death of Tybalt" from Romeo and Juliet - Sergei Sergeyevich Prokofiev
  12. Fantasia on Greensleeves - Ralph Vaughan Williams
  13. Interlude: Henry VIII discusses his marital history
  14. "The Wives of Henry VIII: Divorced, Beheaded, Died"
  15. "March to the Scaffold" from Symphonie fantastique - Hector Berlioz
  16. "Charles II: King of Bling"
  17. "La réjouissance" from Music for the Royal Fireworks -George Frederic Handel

    Part 2

  18. Marche pour la cérémonie des Turcs - Jean-Baptiste Lully
  19. Stupid Deaths: Jean-Baptiste Lully
  20. Interlude: Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart and Ludwig van Beethoven argue over who most deserves the title of Greatest Composer Who Ever Lived
  21. Overture from The Marriage of Figaro - Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
  22. Interlude: George IV discusses his tumultuous political and marital history
  23. "George IV: Couldn't Stand My Wife"
  24. "Wedding March" from A Midsummer Night’s Dream - Felix Mendelssohn
  25. Interlude: Queen Victoria cannot perform; Cleopatra steps in at the last minute
  26. "Ra Ra Cleopatra"
  27. "The Ages of Stone"
  28. "Sacrificial Dance” from The Rite of Spring - Igor Stravinsky
  29. Interlude: A band of Viking warriors invade the hall and head for the stage
  30. "Ride of the Valkyries" from Die Walküre - Richard Wagner
  31. "Literally "

    Reception

The concert was given 4/5 stars from John Lewis in The Guardian. Describing it as "pitched somewhere between a pantomime, a Footlights revue and an old-school variety show", he added that "it is not clear how much Richie Webb's songs benefited from lavish orchestral arrangements: with Cleopatra's Lady Gaga-inspired theme, or Charles II's swaggering Eminem pastiche, the strings were unnecessary, even intrusive."
Writing in The Daily Telegraph, Benedict Brogan also gave the show 4/5 stars, saying that "the clever touch was to bracket each sketch and song with a smartly chosen selection of classical greatest hits, which the Aurora Orchestra under Nicholas Collon ripped out with élan." He further praised the show's accessibility, noting that "Children who came to see their television heroes were cunningly exposed to music that might in future sound familiar, not frightening."