The Scotsman

Rsno/sondergard

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Usher Hall, Edinburgh JJJJ

Not so much a concert, more a statement of intent – even a manifesto. For his inaugural concert as RSNO music director, Thomas Søndergård had taken inspiratio­n from Mahler’s famous quote about a symphony needing to be like the world, to contain everything – as he explained in his chatty introducti­on. It was a demanding but invigorati­ng evening, and it felt like Søndergård was showing us his own musical world, filled with his particular passions.

So there was contempora­ry music, with Finnish composer Lotta Wennäkoski’s madcap scherzo Flounce as opener, driven hard by Søndergård and with the RSNO musicians displaying breathtaki­ng switchback virtuosity. Next came Classical precision, with a slimmed-down band backing Francesco Piemontesi in a fastidious Beethoven

Second Piano Concerto, lovingly shaped and caressed into being, but not really finding its bite until the heavily accented finale.

And, of course, Mahler’s Fifth to finish – the first instalment in Søndergård’s projected four-year Mahler symphony cycle with the orchestra. Its opening funeral march felt strangely well-behaved and snarl-free, but Søndergård soon let rip with a tumultuous, hair-raising second movement and thoroughly unsettling scherzo – making the finale’s grand peroration­s sound all the more earnt. Its famous Adagietto was a study in restraint and spontaneit­y.

Details sparkled with meaning throughout, as though each of the RSNO musicians wanted to contribute their voice to Søndergård’s overarchin­g drama. And the players were on exceptiona­l form – energised by a new sense of direction, a renewed feeling of purpose. Søndergård set the bar high, and we clearly have plenty to anticipate from him.

DAVID KETTLE

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