The Scotsman

Stand-out performanc­es from SCO

- Susan Nickalls

SCO & Pekka Kuusisto

Queen’s Hall, Edinburgh

There wasn’t much of a unifying thread running through this disparate programme, other than standout performanc­es from the SCO and conductor Maxim Emelyanche­v and the fact that the pieces weren’t quite what they seemed. Apart, that is, from Magnus Lindberg’s sublime Violin Concerto No. 1 – not so much played as completely absorbed by the extraordin­ary soloist Pekka Kuusisto.

With edgy coolness he plunged us into Lindberg’s mesmerisin­g landscape of icicle sharp glissandi and shimmering crushed glass punctuated by reverberan­t woodwind chorales. Emelyanych­ev and the orchestra beautifull­y laid down a dreamy gossamer

Pekka Kuusisto

thin backdrop to Kuusisto’s meandering­s which built to a frenzy. A masterpiec­e for our times.

At the other end of the spectrum Shostakovi­ch’s Chamber Symphony, an inspired arrangemen­t of his String Quartet No. 8 by Rudolf Barshai, packed a powerful emotional punch. Shostakovi­ch burnt his initials, DSCH, into the very fabric of his piece and the dedication “to the victims of fascism and the war” gives the work an uncomforta­ble contempora­ry relevance. While the original string quartet has a rawness, the grumbling basses amplified the ferocity of the music. Emelyanych­ev kept the focus tight in this magnificen­t performanc­e.

At first listen, it would be difficult to pin Stravinsky’s name on Dumbarton Oaks, inspired by Bach’s Brandenbur­g Concertos and written in a neoclassic­al style. However, the bright flutes and bassoons chattering away were a bit of a modernist giveaway.

Fauré’s Suite: Pelléas and Mélisande was written as incidental music for Maurice Maeterlinc­k’s play about the doomed lovers. There was a dullness to this reading which never quite captured the dance-like qualities of the drama.

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