The Scotsman

Double shifts will help Music at Paxton reach a larger audience

- Davidkettl­e

The organisati­on, the chaos, the uncertaint­y, the paperwork, the tests, even the length of programmes you’re playing – one hour without an interval, or full-length with an interval? Are you going to be filmed? Everything is completely up in the air. You just go spare.” Pianist Imogen Cooper – recently made a Dame in the Queen’s birthday honours – is reflecting (with her tongue slightly in her cheek) on the cautious return to live performanc­es, and the ongoing uncertaint­ies that musicians are still having to endure. “But look, that’s the downside,” she smiles. “The upside is that getting back to playing to audiences is just wonderful, and underlines for me, after these months of silence, how important it is that we share music in the same space. It’s very magical and very moving coming back.”

One of Britain’s most respected, most perceptive musicians, Cooper has perhaps unsurprisi­ngly found herself busy with recitals across the country since the easing of restrictio­ns in the spring. Among her first performanc­es are a duo of concerts, each given twice, at Music at Paxton in the Scottish Borders later this month, both of which would have formed part of the cancelled 2020 festival. Indeed, as artistic director Angus Smith explains, he’s been keen to transplant as much as possible of what was planned for last year into 2021. “As a performer myself, I understand having my calendar wiped out over the past 15 months. The desire to honour those commitment­s is on a double level: there’s a profession­al side, but also a moral side in terms of artists supporting each other. I’ve been quite staggered by the flexibilit­y that everyone has shown.”

That flexibilit­y at Paxton includes playing shorter programmes twice in the same evening, as Cooper will do. “We tried to come up with a formula that would give us as much resilience as possible,” explains Smith, “so we changed from 90-minute concerts to

60-minute performanc­es, meaning we can present each concert with a socially distanced audience. We needed to ask the performers, but they unhesitati­ngly agreed.”

How does giving a performanc­e twice in a single evening feel? “Quite tiring, to be honest,” admits Cooper. “But one gets used to it. There’s no way of pacing yourself because you can’t hold anything back in the first performanc­e, so you just have to go for it, and make sure that the space

“We tried to come up with a formula that would give us as much resilience as possible"

between the concerts is exactly what you need. Like a darkened room!”

Unlike some other Scottish events, Smith took the decision to keep the festival predominan­tly live, though four events – featuring the Gould Piano Trio and associate ensemble the Maxwell Quartet, as well as Cooper’s concerts – will be additional­ly filmed and available online. Other live highlights include pianist Steven Osborne in an alldebussy programme, Schubert’s Winterreis­e from tenor James

Gilchrist and pianist Anna Tilbrook, plus appearance­s from soprano Elizabeth Watts, Concerto Caledonia and the Brook Street Band.

Cooper’s first recital contrasts Ravel with Schubert, a composer who’s long played a central role in her music making. “What is it that keeps bringing me back to him? Just the sheer humanity of the man. Not many head decisions there, although he’s a great craftsman. He speaks from the heart, and it’s up to you as a performer to let that passage of emotion be clear and transparen­t. He just socks you with a wonderful tune every now and then, and it makes your heart stop.”

Cooper’s second concert marks her first collaborat­ion with Scottish foursome the Maxwell Quartet, in Dvořák’s Second Piano Quintet. How does she find collaborat­ing with musicians for the first time? “It’ll be very intense once we get together. We have to find out what sort of sound we each have, and of course, we won’t know exactly how that will come over until we’re at Paxton, because I won’t have seen the instrument and the space where we’ll be playing, the Picture Gallery at Paxton House. I’m guessing they know the space already – it looks gorgeous.”

Music at Paxton, 16-25 July, www. musicatpax­ton.co.uk

 ??  ?? Newly minted Dame Imogen Cooper is ready to give her all at the piano
Newly minted Dame Imogen Cooper is ready to give her all at the piano
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