The Scotsman

Scottish Chamber Orchestra/maxim Emelyanych­ev, Josef Špaček (violin)

Usher Hall, Edinburgh

- DAVID KETTLE

“Is he any good?” my neighbour asked worriedly. “I really wanted to see Tetzlaff.” He was referring to violinist Josef Špaček, standing in for an indisposed Christian Tetzlaff as just one of two replacemen­t performers in the SCO’S vivid, energetic concert. Špaček might be a less starry name than Tetzlaff, but he clearly has a musical personalit­y every bit as strong and distinctiv­e – and yes, in a beautifull­y lyrical, sharply defined Violin Concerto by his compatriot Dvořák, he was very good indeed.

Špaček took the outer movements at quite a lick, but he was almost nonchalant about the Concerto’s showy pyrotechni­cs. He summoned a remarkable range of colours from his strongly projected Guarneri “del Gesù” instrument, and he delivered an account of the folksy finale so buoyant and translucen­t that it was hard not to be swept up in its enthusiasm. His encore – the finale from Ysaÿe’s Second Sonata – only served to demonstrat­e further his astonishin­g articulati­on and athleticis­m.

The modestly enlarged SCO was on fiery form, too, under the evening’s second replacemen­t musician – young Russian

conductor Maxim Emelyanych­ev, standing in for an indisposed Robin Ticciati. Emelyanych­ev galvanised the musicians with his urgent, demanding gestures – things sometimes seemed a little micro-managed, but there was no shortage of meaningful detail. And as a result, the ‘heavenly lengths’ of Schubert’s epic Great C major Symphony unfolded with smooth, elegant inevitabil­ity, Emelyanych­ev constantly balancing surface charm and vigour with a far darker, more manic undertow – not least in the towering cumulative energy of his propulsive finale. Two lesser-known artists, maybe, but they provided penetratin­g visions nonetheles­s.

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