The Scotsman

JOHN BUTT

-

While the Scotsman Sessions’ founding ambition was to provide an online platform for artists while live performanc­es were impossible, for John Butt – and the Edinburgh-based Dunedin Consort, where he’s music director – live concerts have already restarted. The group made a mad dash to perform at the Heures Musicales de l’abbaye de Lessay festival in Normandy – then an even madder dash back that involved hiring a fishing boat from Cherbourg to Hayling Island, Hampshire, arriving just ten minutes before the 4am deadline on 15 August that would have seen them quarantine­d for two weeks.

“It was a fairly hectic time,” admits Butt. “The audience was very enthusiast­ic but we actually left before the applause had even finished. It was a nail-biting experience at times but on the whole it worked out pretty well.”

“One reason for the urgent return (apart for the pressing need to record a Scotsman Session, obviously) was to record a concert for the Edinburgh Internatio­nal Festival’s Chamber Music Soundscape­s series. Then there’s a full season planned and announced for 2020-21 – though, as Butt admits, “you could say it’s aspiration­al, but our chief executive Jo Buckley has designed it so that, even if we have to cancel a concert, we have the option of doing something for a smaller audience or for online streaming, or we could even record the repertoire instead”.

For his Scotsman Session, Butt has chosen music by a composer close to his heart: JS Bach. “It’s the first Prelude and Fugue from the second book of the Well-tempered Clavier, and it’s one of the pieces I try and play on a regular basis, and have been doing all the way through lockdown. They’re wonderful pieces, both in terms of keeping your musical thinking going and also for technique: Bach seems to design them to massage and exercise different muscles, so it’s been very useful from that point of view too.

“You could say it’s quite representa­tive of what domestic music making has been like – which is also very much what would have been in Bach’s mind when he was writing the pieces.”

DAVID KETTLE

For more informatio­n on the Dunedin Consort, visit https://www.dunedin-consort.org.uk/

 ??  ?? 2 Butt said: ‘They’re wonderful pieces, both in terms of keeping your musical thinking going and also for technique’
2 Butt said: ‘They’re wonderful pieces, both in terms of keeping your musical thinking going and also for technique’

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom