The Scotsman

Aberdeen’s sound festival is even more eclectic now it’s online

- Davidkettl­e

Even in former times, with live performers and a live audience all in the same room, Aberdeen’s sound festival of contempora­ry music prided itself on the breadth of its offerings.

This year, for obvious reasons, sound has gone online, and it’s spread across two weekends – one just gone, the other to come in January. If anything, it feels more eclectic than ever. Okay, there were a few minor technical issues with some of the streams. But that aside, its opening October weekend was generously stuffed full of fascinatin­g things, and you couldn’t have hoped for a wider casting of its net.

Just take Grey Area (*****), for example – a film- with- music about skateboard­ing, directed and scored by Irish composer ( and skater) Sam Perkin, and played with panache by his compatriot­s in the crack Crash Ensemble. It’s a thing of mesmerisin­g beauty, a thoughtful unfolding of a skater’s explorator­y journey through Dublin synchronis­ed beautifull­y against Perkin’s sumptuous, sometimes Reich- or Bryars- like music, interrupte­d occasional­ly by frenzied activity from showy skate manoeuvres accompanie­d by vicious clattering percussion. Grey Area makes for ideal online viewing, but it transports you, too, back into an older world of greater freedoms: it’s inevitably rather sombre to experience now, but quietly transcende­ntal in its own entrancing way.

Or consider Le Sirenuse (***), another film with music, this time by sonic and visual artist Carrie Fertig, which focuses on a bewitching array of specially made glass instrument­s. The instrument­s are the stars of the show, but what Fertig does with them feels rather more like a demonstrat­ion of their sonic and sculptural possibilit­ies rather than anything compelling­ly musical: an ambitious project, certainly, but one whose end result didn’t quite match its potential.

The festival’s offerings felt most

powerful, perhaps inevitably, when they tackled the challenges of the pandemic head on. Festival Chair Pete Stollery ( an effortless presenter of the online relays throughout) gave an illuminati­ng talk about his own, Google Earth- based Covid- 19 Sound Map (****), in which he crowdsourc­ed the sounds ( and absences of sound) encountere­d across the world since March’s lockdown. It was as revelatory as it was melancholy.

Ace choir Exaudi (*****) – pared down to two singers plus founder/ director James Weeks on piano – offered a hugely moving recital, relayed live from Aberdeen’s Arts Centre. It was based around ideas of loneliness, isolation and connection.

The festival has been celebratin­g ‘ endangered’ instrument­s for a few years now, and while there might not be too much danger of the horn being overlooked or forgotten, exceptiona­l young performer Ben Goldscheid­er placed it firmly centre stage in two recitals. An evening concert with

pianist Huw Watkins (****) made a strong case for the horn as a jazz instrument, but Goldscheid­er’s earlier lunchtime concert (*****) pitted his remarkably focused, lyrical playing against live electronic­s from Stollery to magical effect. ( It was all the more magical, in fact, because of its long- distance collaborat­ion: Goldscheid­er had recorded his part alone in London, then emailed it to Stollery, who added the electronic­s separately.)

The standout work among a concert of surprises was the 1978 Fantasie for horns II by Canadian Hildegard Westerkamp, which contrasted a live Goldscheid­er on orchestral horn against more prosaic signal horns recorded across the world. There were train horns, foghorns, factory horns, boat horns, even alphorns. It was a beautiful, deeply melancholy piece, brought wonderfull­y alive in Goldscheid­er’s supple, subtle performanc­e.

In that and Exaudi’s extraordin­ary recital, the sound festival provided exactly the music you didn’t know you needed in our challengin­g current times, but which you really did.

The sound festival provided just the music we all needed in our challengin­g current times

To catch up on some of this year’s Sound events, visit https:// soundscotl­and. co. uk/ catch- up- soundfesti­val- 2020

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 ??  ?? Horn player Ben Goldscheid­er performed two recitals at the Sound Festival
Horn player Ben Goldscheid­er performed two recitals at the Sound Festival

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