The Scotsman

Lammermuir Festival Opening Weekend

- DAVID KETTLE

Cathedrals of sound – that’s the cliché routinely wheeled out to describe Bruckner’s monumental symphonies. But cliché or not, it felt like the ideal descriptio­n for the Lammermuir Festival’s opening concert whose climax was a magnificen­t Bruckner Seventh that filled every nook in the warm interior of St Mary’s Church, Haddington.

Indeed, the BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra players themselves spread back far beyond the nave and chancel, with six or seven rows of woodwind and brass, but they thereby delivered a wonderfull­y three-dimensiona­l richness to the sound. Conductor Karl-heinz Steffens took things at a leisurely pace – perhaps unnecessar­ily so, with St Mary’s admittedly resonant yet beautifull­y clear, crisply detailed acoustic – and stressed the architectu­ral grandeur of the Symphony. His brassy climaxes (complete with quartet of Wagner tubas) were almost overwhelmi­ng – but, more importantl­y, felt like the inevitable outcome of the slowly evolving material that had gone before. His dense, heavy scherzo, however, felt slightly too tightly controlled and soft-edged to whip up the demonic energy the movement can often generate.

Neverthele­ss, it was a magisteria­l performanc­e, full of sonic splendour, with the BBC SSO players on exceptiona­l form. They were utterly convincing, too, before the interval as a far more intimate ensemble for Haydn’s C major Cello Concerto, with 2012 BBC Young Musician winner Laura van der Heijden as soloist. She gave a sprightly, impeccably phrased account, as muscular as it was lyrical – even if her sometimes rather liberal tempo fluctuatio­ns threatened to drag back Steffens’s brisk pace at times.

“I know what you’re thinking: what does that sound like backwards?” A change of tone completely on Saturday afternoon, for harpsichor­dist and scholar John Butt’s masterful journey through Bach’s Musical Offering in Gladsmuir’s Victorian Parish Church, for which he was joined by seven players from his Dunedin Consort

It was a wonderfull­y witty yet erudite event, matching brilliantl­y characterf­ul playing – of the intricate canons and inventions Bach conjured from an awkward theme throw at him by Frederick the Great – with pointed insights from Butt himself.

And it was just the kind of format to bring what Butt described as this ‘arcane mind-music’ dazzlingly alive, as he came up with ever more ingenious ways to demonstrat­e how Bach went far beyond the King’s initial challenge. How about coming up with alternativ­e possibilit­ies for Bach’s unrealised, DIY closing canons? Or getting listeners to raise their hands when they’d had enough of a ‘perpetual’ canon, which could theoretica­lly go on forever? Butt’s talk-plus-performanc­e concept was just as playful and insightful as Bach’s music – enormous but entirely serious fun for both mind and heart.

More music for the heart to close Saturday, with a deeply expressive all-schubert concert from brothers Magnus and Guy Johnston on violin and cello, and pianist Tom Poster )in the intimate, capacity-filled space of Dirleton Kirk. There might have been a few unwelcome intonation lapses and misjudged articulati­ons in Guy J’s hearty, rubato-heavy Arpeggione Sonata, but the threesome’s B flat Piano Trio was full of heroic energy, and their opening Notturno exquisitel­y refined – a performanc­e to truly treasure.

 ??  ?? 2 John Butt and the Dunedin Consort
2 John Butt and the Dunedin Consort

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