The Scotsman

Lockdown celebratio­ns of the power of the human voice

- Davidkettl­e

Of all the online classical offerings available during our Covid times, there’s something especially powerful about those featuring the voice. Perhaps it’s the deep, direct form of human expression, unmediated by an instrument, that packs such a punch. Then again, there’s also the awareness of just how risky vocal projection can be.

Not that there was any suggestion of danger among the clearly distanced 12- strong choir of the Dunedin Consort in How Lonely Sits the City

( ✪ ✪ ✪ ✪ ✪ ) , captured beautifull­y on video in Greyfriars Kirk by Leithbased Arms & Legs production­s. The concert’s themes – of loneliness, isolation, the empty streets of an abandoned city – were dreamt up before the pandemic, but of course feel all the more immediate now.

It’s a cathartic experience in impeccable, gloriously expressive performanc­es. Conductor Nicholas Mulroy – recently appointed as Dunedin’s Associate Director – seems to have a miraculous gift of conjuring highly distinctiv­e, individual sound worlds for each of the concert’s contrastin­g pieces – beautifull­y luminous and supple for the Lassus Lamentatio­ns that frame the performanc­e; warm and resonant for Rudolf Mauersberg­er’s Brahmsian Wie liegt die Stadt so wüste; fiery and chiselled for James Macmillan’s powerful Miserere.

The concert’s newest piece – Ninfea Cruttwell- Reade’s Vigil I, commission­ed by Dunedin for the event – is also its high point. Cruttwell- Reade shifts focus between different quartets of singers, different harmonies, even different languages, creating an engrossing soundscape and astonishin­gly rich writing that rings in the ears long after the piece has ended. Available free at www. dunedin- consort. org. uk until 18 December, this is a considered, concert, captured in CD- quality sound, that feels consoling and inspiring in equal measure.

The Scottish Ensemble – which

has just deservedly won the Royal Philharmon­ic Society’s 2020 Ensemble award – took a more secular approach to similar ideas in Songs for Life ( www. scottishen­semble. co. uk/ concert/ songs- for- life- with- karen- cargill), a collaborat­ion with mezzo- soprano Karen Cargill ( ✪ ✪ ✪ ✪ ) . Filmed by Miranda Stern in Glasgow’s Cottiers Theatre, it butts up an eclectic, sometimes provocativ­e selection of pieces against each other, from a brilliantl­y energetic movement from Walton’s Sonata for String Orchestra to the warmth and richness of George Walker’s Lyric for Strings. Cargill is on exceptiona­l form, responding to the concert’s range of music with disarming simplicity and sincerity – she offers some beautifull­y supple, buoyant Mahler, a quietly harrowing Dido’s Lament, and a very moving Auld Lang Syne to finish. Video and audio aren’t always entirely in sync but nonetheles­s, it’s a typically bold offering, thoughtful­ly delivered.

Cargill makes a return appearance as a tender Maman ( one of a clutch of Scottish singers that also includes Shuna Scott Sendall as a yogateachi­ng cat) in a breathtaki­ng online production of Ravel’s oneact opera L’enfant et les sortilèges

( ✪ ✪ ✪ ✪ ✪ ) from newly establishe­d company VOPERA, the Virtual Opera Project ( www. vopera20. com), free to view until 15 December. Brilliantl­y conceived by director Rachael Hewer and designer Leanne Vandenbuss­che, VOPERA’S astonishin­g, sometimes hallucinat­ory vision of Ravel’s fairytale parable finds a heartbreak­ing home for its cast of animals, furniture and household objects among images only too familiar to us: a storybook princess becomes a nurse in full PPE; a frog chorus meets via Zoom; a dragonfly and bat are isolated behind glass in a care home.

Each part was recorded separately in the soloists’ own homes, then stitched together with phantasmag­orical animations, and a new reduced orchestrat­ion created by conductor Lee Reynolds, played stylishly by the London Philharmon­ic Orchestra.

Technicall­y the results are extraordin­ary, but creatively this is a masterpiec­e, one of the most assured, ambitious and moving projects to have emerged from lockdown..

A storybook princess becomes a nurse in full PPE; a frog chorus meets via Zoom

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 ??  ?? The Dunedin Consort performing How Lonely Sits the City in Greyfriars Kirk
The Dunedin Consort performing How Lonely Sits the City in Greyfriars Kirk

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