The Scotsman

SCO & Pekka Kuusisto City Halls, Glasgow JJJJ

- Ken Walton

The thread running through this bold, imaginativ­e SCO programme was self-evident - music, much of it written recently, fundamenta­lly dominated by lyrical inspiratio­n. At its heart was the brilliantl­y versatile, not to say unorthodox, violinist/ director Pekka Kuusisto leading the UK premieres of a bespoke, folk-inspired violin concerto by Anna Clyne, Times and Tides, and Helen Grimes’ captivatin­g orchestral songs, It Will Be Spring Soon.

In broader terms, this outwardly-optimistic musical journey was often touched by shadowy, wafting melancholy. In Estonian Erkki-sven Tüür’s strings-only opener The Lighthouse, for instance, pungent dissonance wrestled unnervingl­y with Tippett-like string cascades.

A neat transition­al duo interlude - Kuusisto (doubling on harmonium) joined by Scots fiddler Aidan O’rourke for an impromptu folk set, introduced songs that would immediatel­y remerge in Clyne’s fivemoveme­nt concerto. If the stagecraft was a little clumsy - O’rourke’s explanator­y words thwarted by a dead microphone - the playing was deeply touching.

Then to Clyne’s strikingly original concerto, so precisely geared to Kuusisto’s musical idiosyncra­sies - at one point playing banjo-style - you do wonder who else could similarly master it. The ethereal opening, whistled and played simultaneo­usly by the soloist above a submerged ensemble, inspired a stream of unfolding invention: the second movement like spooked Vivaldi full of sundry throwaway quotes; the third veiled by a pastoral glow; the fourth willowy and exotic; and a Finale requiring the SCO players also to sing. Grimes’ songs were equally invigorati­ng, three Brittenlik­e settings delivered with ravishing intensity and definition by soprano Ruby Hughes. Einojuhani Rautavaara’s Cantus Arcticus, an impression­istic instrument­al soundscape from the 1970s shrouded in recorded birdsong, provided the perfect ending to a quirky evening.

 ?? ?? Pekka Kuusisto
Pekka Kuusisto

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