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Diamond Jubilee Concert

The Diamond Jubilee Concert was a British music concert and celebration held outside Buckingham Palace on The Mall in London on 4 June 2012. The concert was organised by Take That singer-songwriter Gary Barlow and was part of Queen Elizabeth II's Diamond Jubilee celebrations.[1][2][3]

Venue

The Mall, London, England

4 June 2012 (2012-06-04)

The Diamond Jubilee Concert followed two concerts held at the palace for the Queen's Golden Jubilee a decade earlier – the classical themed Prom at the Palace and the pop/rock themed Party at the Palace, followed by the Platinum Party at the Palace for the Queen's Platinum Jubilee in 2022.


The concert was partially attended by the Queen, who arrived at 9 pm, but not by Prince Philip who had been taken to hospital with a bladder infection earlier in the day.[4] Prince Charles and other members of the royal family attended the whole concert.

Ticketing[edit]

Ten thousand free tickets were made available to the public, with applications possible, by post or online, between 7 February and 2 March 2012. After the application period closed, successful applicants were then drawn by random ballot.[5] A total of 1.2 million applications were eventually received, 240 for every available pair.[6] Non-ticketed attendees could watch the concert on giant TV screens in the Mall and local Parks. Estimates of these free attendees range from 250,000[7] to 500,000[8] people.

House band[edit]

The house band, led by Mike Stevens, who was also the Musical Director of the concert, consisted largely of the Take That/Gary Barlow band, a few additional musicians and the BBC Concert Orchestra. The house band performed with many of the guest artists that were featured, however Tom Jones, Elton John, Stevie Wonder and Paul McCartney[5] brought their own bands to the concert.

Diamond Jubilee song[edit]

Gary Barlow and Andrew Lloyd Webber wrote a song for the jubilee entitled "Sing" which was performed for the first time at the concert by a choir from many Commonwealth countries. The song draws inspiration from the music and people of the Commonwealth. Its creation was the subject of a one-hour BBC documentary broadcast on 3 June 2012 by BBC One.[10]

Jubilee picnic[edit]

Concert ticket holders were given access to the palace gardens for an afternoon picnic before the main event. They were served cold hampers with a British themed menu specially designed by Heston Blumenthal and the royal chef Mark Flanagan.[11]

with drummers and trumpeters from the second battalion of the Coldstream Guards[12][13] – "Let Me Entertain You"[14]

Robbie Williams

Introduction –

Rob Brydon

and Jessie J – "I Gotta Feeling" / "This Is Love"

will.i.am

– "Domino"[15]

Jessie J

Interlude –

Miranda Hart

and Cheryl (from Girls Aloud) – "Need You Now" (cover of Lady A song)

Gary Barlow

Interlude –

Lee Mack

– Medley: "Dynamite", "The Young Ones", "Devil Woman", "We Don't Talk Anymore", "Wired for Sound" and "The Millennium Prayer" (followed by "Congratulations")

Cliff Richard

Interlude –

Jimmy Carr

– "Hungarian Rhapsody" / "Rhapsody in Blue"

Lang Lang

Interlude –

Miranda Hart

– "O Sole Mio" / "It's Now or Never"

Alfie Boe

Interlude –

Lenny Henry

and Ruby Turner – "You Are So Beautiful"

Jools Holland

Interlude –

Jimmy Carr

– "Slave to the Rhythm"

Grace Jones

Interlude – and Miranda Hart

Lee Mack

– "The A Team"

Ed Sheeran

Interlude –

Rolf Harris

– "Un Bel Di Vedremo"

Renée Fleming

Interlude –

Rob Brydon

– "Mama Told Me (Not to Come)" and "Delilah"

Tom Jones

Interlude – . During the interlude, the Queen arrived.

Lenny Henry

– "Mack the Knife"

Robbie Williams

Interlude –

Rolf Harris

Interlude – organised a forward-moving Mexican wave in the Mall

Rob Brydon

– "Diamonds Are Forever"

Shirley Bassey

– Medley: "Spinning Around", "Can't Get You Out of My Head", "Step Back in Time" and "All the Lovers". Dance troupe Flawless performed during the second half of the number.

Kylie Minogue

Interlude –

Jimmy Carr

and Renée Fleming – "Somewhere"

Alfie Boe

Interlude –

Rob Brydon

– "I'm Still Standing", "Your Song" and "Crocodile Rock"

Elton John

Interlude –

Rolf Harris

A film about the Queen's reign was played, which included her coronation, past jubilees, The Royal Wedding and other events. The film was accompanied by the , performing an instrumental arrangement of "Beautiful Day".

BBC Concert Orchestra

Interlude – (Rolf Harris sang, unaccompanied, a portion of "Two Little Boys" during the interlude.)

Lenny Henry

– "Sir Duke", "Isn't She Lovely?" (the lyrics were amended to refer to the Queen), "Happy Birthday" (with will.i.am) and "Superstition"

Stevie Wonder

Interlude –

Lee Mack

– "Our House" and "It Must Be Love".

Madness

Interlude –

Peter Kay

Finish – made a speech

Prince Charles

"" (National Anthem)

God Save the Queen

Grand Finale – The Queen lit the last National Beacon, after which there was a firework display, during which the melodies of several patriotic songs and hymns were played: "" (Georg Friedrich Händel), "I Vow to Thee My Country" (Gustav Holst), "Land of Hope and Glory" (Edward Elgar) and "Ode to Joy" / Anthem of Europe (Ludwig van Beethoven).

Zadok the Priest

The running order was:

will.i.am and Jessie J – "I Gotta Feeling" / "This Is Love"

Jessie J – "Domino"

Tom Jones – "Mama Told Me (Not To Come)" and "Delilah"

Kylie Minogue – medley "Spinning Around", "Can't Get You Out Of My Head", "Step Back In Time" and "All The Lovers"

Elton John – "I'm Still Standing", "Your Song" and "Crocodile Rock"

Stevie Wonder – "Sir Duke", "Isn't She Lovely", "Happy Birthday" (with will.i.am) and "Superstition"

Madness – "Our House" and "It Must Be Love"

Paul McCartney – "All My Loving", "Let It Be", "Live and Let Die" and "Ob-La-Di, Ob-La-Da"

Finish – Prince Charles made a speech at the end of the concert

The National Anthem was played, which majority sang.

The concert was broadcast live on BBC One, BBC One HD and BBC Radio 2. American broadcaster ABC showed highlights the following day after as Concert for the Queen: A Diamond Jubilee Celebration With Katie Couric as well as an encore airing on 9 June.[5] Broadcasting unions announced in April 2012 that they would ballot their members over taking strike action due to an ongoing pay dispute with the BBC, leading to media speculation that the BBC coverage of the concert could be affected.[16] It was later confirmed that the BBC's coverage wouldn't be affected by any strikes. It aired on 5 June on CBC television in Canada. BBC Entertainment showed the concert on 8 June in Latin America.


The concert aired from 19:30 until approximately 23:00 UK time. In the UK the programme was seen by an average of 15.32 million viewers on BBC One,[17] making it the 6th highest UK TV audience of 2012, but peaking near 17 million.[18]


For the ABC broadcast the following aired:


The show of 5 June on ABC opened to 6.4 million (4.1/6) before rising in the second hour to 7.2 million (4.7/8) for an average of 6.8 million viewers for the evening.[19]


The broadcast was aired on Channel 9 in Australia on 5 June – and was broadcast in its entirety apart from:

Party at the Palace

Prom at the Palace

Platinum Party at the Palace

Official site

Official site (BBC)