The Scotsman

There’s a new classical music festival for Perth this Easter

- Kenwalton @kenwalton4

Just as new shoots begin to emerge in our gardens, so too there are signs of a spring resurgence in the Scottish Classical music world. And for starters, Perth Concert Hall, in collaborat­ion with BBC Radio 3, is to present the Perth Easter Festival of Classical Music.

It won’t be to a live audience; that’s not permitted yet. What we will experience though, via the screens in our homes, is a welcome reassuranc­e that the Covid shutdown has been, for this venue at least, merely a period of hibernatio­n.

Yes, the 1,000-seater Perth hall has played its part in the online orchestral series that have kept music alive since last summer, playing host to the Scottish Chamber Orchestra’s larger repertoire offerings. But this new series boasts an identity of its own, principall­y through the familiar Perth faces starring in the four daily chamber music programmes (6-9 April) that follow on from the Dunedin Consort’s opening St Matthew Passion today.

James Waters, the venue’s creative director for classical music, had been nurturing the idea as far back as last July, when he first mooted a BBC collaborat­ion with Scots-based Radio 3 senior producer Lindsay Pell, which they successful­ly tested out in September’s Lammermuir Festival, where Waters is also co-director.

“One of our shared priorities, especially given the circumstan­ces, was to support Scottish artists,” Waters says. Both he and Pell started planning and secured pianist Steven Osborne for a Perth performanc­e of Messiaen’s Quartet for the End of Time, originally scheduled for February. Osborne – a brilliant Messiaen interprete­r – will instead open the Easter chamber series (6 April) with soloists from the SCO.

The following day, the SCO link is continued with a clarinet recital by the superlativ­e Maximilian­o Martin, accompanie­d by Perth-born pianist Scott Mitchell in sonatas by Saintsaëns, Poulenc and Bernstein.

Then, on 8 April, it’s the Maxwell

Quartet in string quartets by Haydn and Beethoven. “They are turning into a really major quartet, who were cultivatin­g a considerab­le internatio­nal career before it got stuffed by Covid,” says Waters. Viewers of the Maxwell’s Scotsman Sessions film will no doubt agree.

The chamber series – broadcast on Radio 3 and released for viewing at 1pm on consecutiv­e days – ends on 9 April with Edinburgh pianist Susan Tomes and members of the RSNO in the quintets for piano and winds by Mozart and Beethoven.

Waters is thrilled also to be hosting the Dunedin Consort, whose December Messiah had to be cancelled when restrictio­ns tightened just before Christmas. John Butt directs a classic Dunedin-style singlevoic­e-to-a-part performanc­e of the St Matthew Passion with English tenor Andrew Tortise as the Evangelist.

To make it all happen, Waters has drawn on the BBC’S sound broadcasti­ng expertise coupled

with the in-house film production team that has been maintained and developed at Perth Concert Hall, despite the inevitable income loss and redundanci­es of the past year. “We have all the toys in-house and will combine our own ‘as live’ filming with the Radio 3 sound feed.”

All of which has Waters thinking about how things will be when the green light is eventually given to resume live audience events. “We’ve all learnt so much during the pandemic, and the challenge will not just be how to nurture audiences back into things that are live, but also how, or whether, we hang on to what we have learnt in terms of online presentati­on.”

He’s convinced there is a place for online, especially in relation to audience outreach and education. But he’s equally assured that people will come back to the concert hall. “In audience surveys taken when England opened for concerts, over 80 per cent felt satisfied venues had dealt well with things and that they would go back.” It’s good to see Perth taking its own steps in the right direction.

“One of our shared priorities, especially given the circumstan­ces, was to support Scottish artists”

For details of the Perth Easter Festival of Classical Music, visit www.horsecross.co.uk. The full chamber series (6-9 April) will be broadcast live on BBC Radio 3

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 ??  ?? The Dunedin Consort play the opening concert of the Perth Easter Festival
The Dunedin Consort play the opening concert of the Perth Easter Festival
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