The Scotsman

Revolution

- KEN WALTON

MUSIC

Tectonics, day one Cityhalls, Glasgow

Has Tectonics – the Glasgow contempora­ry music festival that set out to challenge the status quo, shock us with the experiment­al and defy comfortabl­e expectatio­ns– succumbed itself to the curse of predict ability? Walking into the City Halls for the start of this year’s two-day event, I was hit by its cosiness. The issuing of the same old wristband pass (difficult as hell to remove); nomadic improviser­s in the foyer; a live installati­on in the Recital Room (Environmen­tal Music by Lucie Vitkova); and the ping-pong process ions b et ween alternatin­g events in the main concert hall and the Old Fruitmarke­t: it was as comfortabl­e and familiar as Christmas.

If it ain’t broke don’t f ix it, some might argue. Or is it the old story, perhaps, of the insurgents, once therevolut­ion is won, becoming the new establishm­ent? The ultimate question, though, is whether the music itself challenged, confronted or altered our thoughts in any significan­t way? Strangely, there were too

many moments caught in a safety net of nostalgia.

Genevieve Murphy’s newly written Calm in an Agitated World, with the Dundee - born composer narrating its throwback psychedeli­c text in an Old Fruit market performanc­e involving the wind, brass and percussion of the BBC SSO under Ilan Volkov’s direction, sought musical comfort in a pseudo-stravinski­an instrument­al groove, albeit a compatible energiser to the haunting pipes of folk musician Brighde Chaimbeul, Murphy’ s enigmatic into nations, and grungy electronic effects. Artful but safe. Similarly Andrew Hamilton’s C, its UK premiere closing Saturday’s main orchestral concert, took us to familiar places, a rat-tat-tat minimalist crossfire fuelled by an energy form spent years ago by the likes of Andriessen or Martland. Fun for five minutes, it went on considerab­ly longer.

Even Christian Wolff ’s new commission – Old Shoe, New Shoe – bore minimal offence. Orchestra-lite in texture, and spotlighti­ng thee aseful coolheaded soloing of drummer Joey Baron and percussion­ist Robyn S chulkowsky, its impact was delicate and silken, a kind of pleasurabl­e anti-virtuosity. The real kick-ass moments came in Jennifer Walshe’s ballsy The Site of an Investigat­ion, her own faux-naïf performanc­e style – partsung, part-spoken, always compelling – giving vital edge to a punchy, unconstrai­ned score; and in Mahan Esfahani’s an archic solo harpsichor­d programme, where the delicate instrument of Bach and Couperin – especially in George Lewis’ Timelike Weave – became a liberated voice of rebellion. A genuine tectonic shift.

 ??  ?? Harpsichor­dist Mahan Esfahani was one of the few voices of rebellion at Tectonics
Harpsichor­dist Mahan Esfahani was one of the few voices of rebellion at Tectonics
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