The Scotsman

BBC SSO & Javier Perianes

City Halls, Glasgow

- DAVID KETTLE

IF THOMAS Dausgaard and the BBC SSO’S concert of Spanish-inspired music by Debussy, Ravel and Falla brought some Iberian sunshine to a drab March evening in Glasgow, it was the primal, unforgivin­gly bright light of the Mediterran­ean at noon. That was no bad thing, though, as Dausgaard threw aside any sense of soft-focus musical tourism and instead set about what felt like a forensic examinatio­n of these exotic, colourful works, sharply chiselled and hard-edged.

There were moments when his Debussy Images seemed almost too violent – the opening chords of Ibéria shuddered around City Halls – though he negotiated and balanced the composer’s intricate, everchangi­ng textures expertly, and with buoyant, restless energy. Likewise, the guitarstru­m chords of Falla’s Threecorne­red Hat Dances had a striking rawness and bite, and his Ravel Alborada del gracioso that opened the concert’s second half generated an increasing­ly desperate, manic energy, as if its eponymous jester were snarling through a rictus grin.

Things calmed down for Spanish pianist Javier Perianes’s fluid account of his compatriot Falla’s Nights in the Gardens of Spain, despatched with an almost casual nonchalanc­e, his tumbling cascades of notes impeccably articulate­d, his more assertive passages muscular and fiery. Dausgaard closed, however, with an increasing­ly delirious performanc­e of Ravel Rapsodie espagnole, its obsessive repetition­s sounding increasing­ly claustroph­obic. Though perhaps slightly monochrome in its musical theme, it was a thrilling evening nonetheles­s: Dausgaard clearly has a natural passion and empathy for this music, and the SSO crackled with electricit­y. But in the end, it was the music’s darkness and grotesquer­ie that stuck in the mind.

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