Moving response to COP26
RSNO & Patricia Kopatchinskaja Glasgow Royal Concert Hall New Auditorium
Away from the grinding diplomacy at the SECC, Moldovan violinist Patricia Kopatchinskaja had a chilling, sincere and direct musical message to deliver as part of the cultural programme surrounding COP26: a quasitheatrical presentation Dies Irae, in which she featured alongside musicians from the RSNO and Royal Conservatoire of Scotland.
Out of the barren electronic landscape of Giacinto Scelsi’s Okanagon came the darkened, explosive entrance of an agitated Kopatchinskaja and RSNO Baroque-style ensemble in Biber’s famously pugilistic Battalia, each eccentric movement giving
way to one from the more contemporary surrealism of George Crumb’s antivietnam War quartet, Black Angels.
Then from backstage, a moment that seemed to assuage the foregoing visual and aural cacophony, the RCS Vocal Ensemble, under Tim Dean, in Lotti’s despairing motet Crucifixus; but only momentarily, giving way to a raucous, deliberately irritating invasion of RCS trombonists, and a bizarrely moving improvisation that pointed the way, via the calmer territory of John Dowland, to Galina Ustwolskaja’s Komposition No 2: Dies Irae.
Written under the old Soviet regime, this saturating 1970s work was presented as a haunting cortege and meditation on The Last Judgement, performed by eight (mainly RCS) double basses and a front-stage coffin-like box, which Kopatchinskaja struck menacingly with hammers and ultimately deafening force.
But that wasn’t the final say. That was played out against the haunting intonation of the traditional Dies Irae plainchant, the cast processing with torchlights and ticking metronomesgradually extinguished to the point where a shrouded Kopatchinskaja was the only remaining bearer. Light out, metronome silenced, point made.