The Scotsman

MUSIC

- DAVID KETTLE

The Würth Philharmon­ic and Maxim Vengerov Usher Hall, Edinburgh

IN CASE anyone needed reminding, Maxim Vengerov’s performanc­e of the opening of Bruch’s Violin Concerto demonstrat­ed why he is one of the most revered performers around. Beautifull­y shaped, gutsy and forthright, it had each note telling its own story, sometimes pausing for reflection or in surprise, sometimes pushing on eagerly.

Vengerov provided a starry conclusion to the Usher Hall’s Sunday Classics season with the recently formed Würth Philharmon­ic, demonstrat­ing both facets of his musical personalit­y as violinist and conductor in a single show. (Stamatia Karampini conducted for the first half.)

The Saint-saëns Introducti­on and rondo capriccios­o that followed the Bruch felt like a programmed encore (although Vengerov supplied a solo encore of his own – a luxuriant Sarabande from Bach’s Second Partita), and here, too, he gave even the composer’s flashiest violin pyrotechni­cs a strong sense of purpose.

After the interval, Vengerov

was on the podium to conduct a Shostakovi­ch Tenth Symphony that was surprising­ly brisk and agile, though vividly characteri­sed and never lacking seriousnes­s of intent – especially in its driving, brutal, Stalin scherzo, but also in the third movement’s coolly intoned horn calls, unreciproc­ated appeals to a distant beloved.

There were some fleeting ensemble issues among the Würth players, and a sense that they were yet to find their proper blend and balance between sections – not to mention worryingly few female faces among the band’s ranks.

But this was a commanding, memorably spine-tingling performanc­e nonetheles­s.

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