The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Violinist sets pulses racing

- writes Garry Fraser.

A chance to see violinist Joshua Bell is something to seize on, but the opportunit­y to see him three times in the space of a week is something only the Edinburgh Festival could offer,

As artist in residence this year, Bell performed in the capacity of solo and piano, solo and orchestra and as a member of a piano trio.

It was this role that I chose to see him, not simply because of the quality of fellow musicians, Steven Isserlis (cello) and Denes Varjon (piano), but because I had never heard him in chamber music mode.

The programme was marvellous­ly balanced, with four works from the Romantic era, written between the years of 1849 and 1855 from the pens of Robert and Clara Schumann, Mendelssoh­n and Brahms.

One and three of the four were Romances from the Schumann husband and wife partnershi­p, the first for piano and cello, the second for piano and violin.

Quite identical in form as were the performanc­es of Isserlis and Bell, exploiting the serenity and the passion the works invoked.

Second and fourth in the running order was where the combinatio­n of piano, violin and cello came into its own.

This really sent the pulses racing. In the Mendelssoh­n C minor piano trio took a short while before the balance settled but it was powerful stuff, mixed with true melodic brilliance.

The Brahms B major trio was a carbon copy, possibly more intense but parallel in terms of flair, marvellous technique and intuitive interactio­n between all three players.

This was a performanc­e where even the most carefullyc­onsidered superlativ­e falls short.

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