The Scotsman

Perth is in the spotlight with two new classical concert series

- Kenwalton @kenwalton4

For the remainder of this month, the classical music spotlight will fall very definitely on Perth. The reason is twofold: on the one hand, from this weekend until 29 May, Perth Festival of the Arts is offering a comprehens­ive programme of online concerts, ranging from Nicola Benedetti and the Scottish Chamber Orchestra to a solo recital by rising piano star Isata Kanneh-mason. On the other hand, there’s the simultaneo­us rolling out of Perth Concert Hall’s latest lunchtime recital series (25-28 May), broadcast live each day on BBC Radio 3, and now likely to be among the first live audience events in Scotland since the latest easing of restrictio­ns. Numbers able to attend are limited, but it’s a liberating sign.

Sharp-eyed strategist­s may be thinking: why aren’t these two initiative­s pooling together to market as one? It was a question of timing, says James Waters, creative director for classical music at the Concert Hall: “By [the time restrictio­ns were lifted] the festival had already launched.” Festival administra­tor Helen Helen Mackinnon is equally resigned to pragmatism. “The Concert Hall series was originally scheduled only as BBC recordings,” she explains. The option to admit audiences came late in the day.

Either way, Perth has ended up with a double dose of fantastic music. In particular, Mackinnon’s concert package sends a clear signal that the festival is once again serious about mounting a classical music programme identifiab­le as its own, albeit online this year. The previous regime’s reliance on general purpose, off-the-shelf touring acts had taken the edge off an event once hailed for its audaciousl­y creative and bespoke artistic policy.

Mackinnon, who is also a composer, has been in post three years, but given the cancellati­on of the 2020 Festival, her influence is only now becoming properly felt. “Some of this year’s artists had already been scheduled for 2020, but there are

others, like the Scottish Ensemble, who hadn’t been to the festival for a while,” she says. “This has been a great opportunit­y to reconnect with old friends, and to explore new partnershi­ps.”

The fully digital series opened on 20 May with the Scottish Ensemble performing in The Byre at Inchyra, with a musical travelogue which ranged from the Balkans to the Americas. This was followed yesterday by the versatile young Spanish saxophonis­t Manu Brazo, who teamed up way violinist Claudia Uriarte and pianist Indrawati in a programme reflecting topically on a “world without music.” Tonight, regular choral visitors, The Sixteen, include a new work commission­ed from baritone Roderick Williams for a programme recorded in London.

Following successful concerto appearance­s in Scotland before lockdown, Kanneh-mason plays an afternoon recital of Mozart, Barber, Chopin and Gershwin tomorrow, while The Gesualdo Six’s exploratio­n of the Renaissanc­e madrigal is set in Perth Museum and Art Gallery (25 May). Rachmanino­v fans can learn a little more about the dour Russian through a presentati­on featuring his words and music by soprano Ilona Domnich, pianist Sholto Kynoch and critic Michael White on 27 May; the Sitkovestk­y Piano Trio play Schumann and Tchaikovsk­y on 28 May, and the series

ends with Benedetti and the SCO in Mendelssoh­n’s Violin Concerto.

“We’ve also launched a new initiative, Scotland Trending, promoting up and coming artists in Scotland,” says Mackinnon. It’s a cross-genre music series, running from 24-29 May, that also embraces indie/rock, folk and jazz. “It’s all part of the rebuilding process coming out of Covid,” she adds. “We have so many ideas bubbling away, part of a fiveyear plan to grow the festival.”

The bonus of Waters’ lunchtime concert hall series adds further kudos to the Perth blitz, with such eyecatchin­g names as saxophonis­t Jess Gillam, percussion­ist Colin Currie, locally-born pianist Alasdair Beatson and mezzo soprano Jess Dandy accompanie­d by the heroic Malcolm Martineau.

In line with Level 2 Covid regulation­s, the hall is working to the maximum permitted audience capacity of 100, applying 2 metres social distancing. And where most venues, including Perth, would struggle to make such a series financiall­y viable as a result of drasticall­y limited box office returns, the BBC partnershi­p minimises the risk.

“It is almost impossible to believe that we will be able to welcome a live audience back to Perth Concert Hall, but it seems that this is the case,” says Waters. “We are thrilled to be co-producing this series with BBC Radio 3 who are bringing a fabulous set of artists to Perth. We just can’t wait.”

“This has been a great opportunit­y to reconnect with old friends”

Full informatio­n on Perth Festival is at www.perthfesti­val.co.uk; details of the Perth Concert Hall series are at www.horsecross.co.uk

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 ??  ?? The Gesualdo Six performing as part of Perth Festival of the Arts
The Gesualdo Six performing as part of Perth Festival of the Arts
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