The Scotsman

Scottish Chamber Orchestra/joseph Swensen, Amy Dickson (saxophone)

Queen’s Hall, Edinburgh

- DAVID KETTLE

A short Saxophone Concerto, in three movements of about five minutes each – James Macmillan’s modest, rather self-effacing descriptio­n of his new work for Australian-born saxophonis­t amy dick son and the Scottish Chamber Orchestra might have made it sound like a lightweigh­t, occasional piece. It was anything but.

Transformi­ng and subverting seemingly innocuous Scottish traditiona­l music forms – a strathspey, a reel and a jig, plus rich heterophon­ies nodding to Gaelic psalm singing – it seemed, like so much of Macmillan’s recent music, as if there were an agenda being played out, a story being told. What that was, however, remained an enigma.

In musical terms, however, it was a remarkably concentrat­ed, punchy, pungent piece, with extraordin­arily inventive, piquant writing for his string orchestra – played with gusto and biting precision by the SCO strings under an energetic Joseph Swensen. Dickson seemed occasional­ly to be still finding her feet in conveying the work’s drama, but she gave a beautifull­y nuanced account nonetheles­s, full of subtle, luscious colours, not least in the keening lines

of the slow movement. Dickson’s succulent tone came into its own in her velvety account of Glazunov’s Saxophone Concerto, which she delivered with utter conviction.

And Swensen provided two thought-provoking bookends to the two concertos, with the SCO on blistering form. His opening Sibelius Pelleas and Melisande was dark, sonorous and gutsy, brilliantl­y alive to each movement’s often surreal picture painting. His closing Beethoven Eighth Symphony – so brisk it seemed over in a flash – crackled with glee – and it’s not often you see a conductor having so much sheer fun on the podium.

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