The Scotsman

Unmellow cello duet is more of an Anglo-french duel

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Politics and classical music make for controvers­ial bedfellows – some say they should never be seen in each other’s company, while others insist they’re inseparabl­e.

It’s a relationsh­ip that Aberdeen’s Sound Festival of contempora­ry music placed centre-stage in its opening weekend, in a seemingly innocuous concert of two world premieres for cellists

(JJJJ). With one performer English and the other French, one male and the other female, and with similar contrasts of nationalit­y and gender in the duo of composers commission­ed to write for them, the potential for interrogat­ing political difference­s was clearly too tempting to resist.

The result, named We Need to Talk/il faut qu’on parle, was the culminatio­n of a months-long project instigated by festival director Fiona Robertson, and it was as provocativ­e as it was rewarding. French composer Frédéric Pattar’s elegant Around Agon began as a somewhat badtempere­d duel between the two players, battling over musical phrases as well as swiping their bows aggressive­ly through the air, Errol Flynn-style. But it ended optimistic­ally in a spirit of understand­ing and agreement, as though musical cooperatio­n had trumped competitio­n.

British composer Laura Bowler moved more directly into sexual politics in her Two Cellos, and probably bit off a bit more than she could properly digest as a result, but there were nonetheles­s unsettling frissons as the two performers caressed each other’s cellos and even scandalous­ly swapped instrument­s. Both pieces were witty and timely, and epitomised the outward-looking spirit of partnershi­p that has driven Sound for many years.

Indeed, partnershi­ps abounded across the festival’s opening weekend. Old and new collided in a collaborat­ion between the

and electronic musician on Friday evening (JJJJ), in a blazing account of Janacek’s Intimate Letters Quartet, delivered entirely from memory by the Singh players and all the more immediate and gripping for that, followed by new work Written in Fire, a disturbing exploratio­n of desire and obsession that pitted soaring lines from the string players against dark, thudding beats from Vessel.

Keening oboe met cuttingedg­e electronic­s on Saturday afternoon when crack British oboist partnered with sound chair

behind a mixing desk and laptop (JJJJJ). Edwin Roxburgh’s at the still point of the turning world made compelling use of the simplest of ideas: the oboe’s lines sampled, delayed, then retransmit­ted through speakers around the audience. Best of all, though, was Heinz Holliger’s classic and genuinely discomfort­ing Cardiophon­ie, which uses the performer’s own heartbeat – relayed to the audience thanks to a contact mic – as its pulse, building to a predictabl­y cataclysmi­c conclusion.

And the collaborat­ion between oboist

and cellist of the and five emerging Scottish-based composers on Saturday lunchtime (JJJJ) threw up some affecting works. Gillian Walker’s Polaroid for Chris Marker and Kevin Leomo’s Silhouette­s melded the two instrument­s’ sounds to ear-baffling effect, while Ewan Mackay’s beautifull­y crafted pastoral Over the Far Horizon was sensitive and darkly lyrical. They’re clearly names to watch, helped on their way by the nurturing partnershi­ps that sound places at the heart of its work.

DAVID KETTLE

 ??  ?? 0 Red Note Ensemble musicians worked with five emerging composers at Aberdeen’s Sound Festival
0 Red Note Ensemble musicians worked with five emerging composers at Aberdeen’s Sound Festival
 ??  ?? 0 Matthew Sharp: Dynamic playing in two world premieres
0 Matthew Sharp: Dynamic playing in two world premieres

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