The Scotsman

MUSIC

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BBC SCO

City Halls, Glasgow

CENTENARIE­S are great for bringing out the forgotten curiositie­s of a major composer’s output. Earlier this year Glasgow was lucky enough to hear Leonard Bernstein’s Mass, part Godspell, part Ken Russell. Not a million miles away in this paradoxica­l populist high-art vein is Songfest, Bernstein’s gauche, in-yourface cycle of American poems for six singers and orchestra, the ultimate destinatio­n of Thursday’s season opener by the BBC SSO.

This was one of principal conductor Thomas Dausgaard’s stimulatin­g Composer Roots programmes, establishi­ng Bernstein’s debts to Copland and Gershwin and his very obvious influence on such American successors as Augusta Read Thomas.

There was a palpable startof-term freshness to the opening half. Dausgaard seemed to stand back from the burnished brass and welter of percussion, allowing Copland’s Fanfare for the Common Man to generate its own spine-tingling energy. The bullish swagger of Gershwin’s Rhapsody in Blue bore similar self-generating momentum, much in response to pianist Marc-andré Hamelin’s hardnosed definition.

Thomas’ Brio certainly owes everything to Bernstein, from its West Side Story rhythms and timbres to its irreverent street rhetoric. There were rocky moments in an otherwise high-voltage performanc­e.

Then the Bernstein, alluringly thuggish and eclectic, in which the solo singers – Tracy Cantin, Kelley O’connor, Michèle Losier, Paul Appleby, Nmon Ford and Musa Ngqungwana – visibly revelled in the music’s theatrical flamboyanc­e. Couldn’t hear the words, though. Surtitles would have helped.

KEN WALTON

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