The Scotsman

Moving response to COP26

- KEN WALTON

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.

 ?? ?? Patricia Kopatchins­kaja
Patricia Kopatchins­kaja

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