The Herald

End of two eras as orchestras prepare for the classics season

Oundjian and Ticciati’s finales see orchestral big-hitters given prominence

- KATE MOLLESON

WE REACH the end of a couple of eras in the coming musical season. The Scottish Chamber Orchestra has yet to name its next principal conductor, but Robin Ticciati has already started his new job with the Deutsches Symphonie-Orchestra Berlin, and their debut recording together, a beautiful disc of Debussy and Faure soon to be released on Linn, suggests that partnershi­p will be a good one.

Ticciati’s final season with the SCO focuses on the music of Dvorak and welcomes some illustriou­s pianists, with opening night including Dvorak’s Eighth Symphony and Mitsuko Uchida playing Mozart (Edinburgh & Glasgow, October 12 & 13) and Andras Schiff performing Dvorak’s rarely-heard Piano Concerto (Edinburgh & Glasgow, December 7 & 8).

In Glasgow, the Royal Scottish National Orchestra plays musical chairs. The orchestra has already named its next music director as current principal guest conductor Thomas Sondergard, and filling his shoes as guest will be the vibrant young Elim Chan, a fine choice.

Outgoing music director Peter Oundjian makes the most of his last season in Scotland by ticking off orchestral big-hitters: Stravinsky’s The Rite Of Spring (Dundee, Edinburgh & Glasgow, October 5-7), Sibelius’s Second Symphony (Perth, Edinburgh, Glasgow, October 12-14), Beethoven’s Pastoral (Dundee, Edinburgh, Glasgow; November 2-4), Brahms’s German Requiem (Edinburgh, Glasgow, December 1-2) – and that’s just before Christmas.

No transfers to report at City Halls, where the BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra opens its new season with another of chief conductor Thomas Dausgaard’s “composer roots” series. This is where Dausgaard looks at a composer in the context of his (for they are all he) heritage, be it folk music, sacred chant or some other lineage that seems relevant. It’s a simple notion but simple notions are often the strongest, and if you heard the orchestra’s Rachmanino­v Prom last month you’ll know how effective a clever segue can be. (The Latvian Chamber Choir sang Russian Orthodox chants as introducti­ons to Rachmanino­v’s Second Symphony and Third Piano Concerto; the impact was breathtaki­ng.)

So to start the BBCSSO season we get Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony in the company of Palestrina and Haydn via Bach, Handel and more (September 21, Glasgow).

Other highlights this autumn include Karen Cargill, fresh from a triumphant summer singing Wagner and Mahler in Edinburgh and Schoenberg at the Proms, in Elgar’s Sea Pictures (Glasgow & Edinburgh, September 28 & October 1, Edinburgh, with the Glasgow concert also including the next instalment of the orchestra’s Tippett symphony cycle). Matthias Pintscher conducts Siddhartha by the Quebecois visionary Claude Vivier (November 11) and Ilan Volkov conducts music by Cassandra Miller and Salvatore Sciarrino alongside Beethoven’s Eroica Symphony (November 16).

Festival-wise, the behemoth that is Edinburgh makes way for more secluded autumn happenings. In the west, James MacMillan’s Cumnock Tryst takes place around Ayrshire from September 28-October 1 and features Scottish percussion luminary Colin Currie.

In the east, the superb Lammermuir Festival runs from September 15-24 and this year’s programme looks better than ever. Mozart’s comic opera rarity La Finta Giardinier­a is staged by Ryedale Festival Opera (also being seen at Perth Concert Hall on September 21); pianist Steven Osborne is in recital with cellist Alban Gerhardt; Lars Vogt plays Beethoven Piano Concertos with the Royal Northern Sinfonia; the Quartet Mosaique is in residence; the Gould Piano Trio gets installed for various coffee concerts and the premiere of a new work by Stuart Macrae; and the Orlando Consort give two concerts including a live soundtrack to Carl Theodor Dreyer’s 1928 film La Passion de Jeanne d’Arc.

The Dunedin Consort is a Lammermuir fixture and this year you can hear members Huw Daniel, Alison McGillivra­y and

Jan Waterfield playing Buxtehude, John Butt playing Bach’s Goldberg Variations and the whole band closing the festival with Handel’s oratorio Il Trionfo del Tempo e del Disinganno.

Elsewhere, catch the Dunedins performing Bach masses in Edinburgh and Aberdeen

(October 29 and 30) and get hold of their latest recording: Monteverdi’s 1610 Vespers, released on Linn next week.

Looking north, Sound festival takes over Aberdeen and environs from October 26-November 11 and its theme is northernne­ss, with director Fiona Robertson questionin­g “whether there is such a thing as a northern sound in classical, folk, jazz and electroaco­ustic music.”

Composer Pete Stollery adds: “the beginning of the 20th century coincided with the unfolding of the mature and distinctiv­e output of the Finnish composer Jean Sibelius. To many this represents the beginning of the phenomenon of ‘a northern sound world’; others might regard Sibelius’ works as a further developmen­t of pre-existing northern approaches to some of the elements of music – notably texture, melody, timbre, harmony and pace.”

Stollery ventures: “What is not in dispute is the extent to which creative musical endeavour in northern parts of the world, particular­ly northern Europe, has blossomed in the decades since Sibelius.” To be discussed!

Sound opens with Montreal’s new music specialist­s the Bozzini Quartet, pictured, and the festival launches a five-year project around “endangered musical instrument­s” – cue stars of the bassoon world Pascal Gallois, Laurence Perkins, Lesley Wilson and Peter Whelan, and new music for bassoon including a piece by Benedict Mason co-commission­ed by Red Note Ensemble.

Red Note also feature at this year’s Huddersfie­ld Contempora­ry Music Festival, with new works by James Dillon opening the festival and, with the brilliant accordioni­st Andreas Borregaard, music by Maja S K Ratkje in a new installati­on by Kathy Hinde. (Huddersfie­ld, November 17-18).

Beyond festivals, if you’re in the vicinity of Tobermory tomorrow you can be first to hear the

Scottish Ensemble’s latest tour programme (string quintets by Mozart, Brahms and Mendelssoh­n – touring Aberdeen, Glasgow, Edinburgh, London, Perth and Dumfries from October 12-17).

In November the Ensemble teams up with theatre company Vanishing Point for a drama that, they say, “sets Arvo Pärt’s spiritual and mesmeric Tabula Rasa in a theatrical context, exploring the recognised role of the piece in the care of patients during their final days”. (Glasgow, Edinburgh, Inverness, November 3-24).

Edinburgh’s venerable New Town Concerts were founded in the 1960s as a subscripti­on series with an well-intentione­d (if slightly damning) ambition “to light up the 49 weeks of musical darkness over the winter months between one Edinburgh Internatio­nal Festival and the next.”

The name dates back to the Freemasons’ Hall in George

Street, which hosted chamber concerts until the series decamped to the Queen’s Hall in the 1980s. This year’s programme opens with pianist Paul Lewis (October 23), and the Quartetto di Cremona brings an all-Italian programme on November 20. The Cremona group also features at Milngavie Music Club on October 14, as do the excellent young Van Kuijk Quartet on 11 November; both play Beethoven.

For local quartets, try the Edinburgh Quartet in Tchaikovsk­y and Janacek in Glasgow, Dunkeld, Edinburgh and Lerwick (November 9-15) or the excellent Glasgow-based Maxwell Quartet, led by violinist Colin Scobie and powered by cellist Duncan Strachan, who are off to compete in the Trondheim Internatio­nal Chamber Music Competitio­n in late September then play concerts at Crear in Kintyre, Milngavie, Musselburg­h and Glasgow (November 3-18).

The Hebrides Ensemble performs Schumann and Schubert song via orchestrat­ions by

Reinbert de Leeuw in a setting “reminiscen­t of the Weimar cabaret scene” (Glasgow, Edinburgh, November 20 & 22).

Perth’s heavyweigh­t series of Sunday afternoon piano recitals opens on September 24 with Richard Goode, followed by Alexander Gavrylyuk (October 8) and Imogen Cooper (November

5).

And finally, the heats kick off this Friday for the Scottish Internatio­nal Piano Competitio­n: 32 pianists from 20 countries will be whittled down to three for the final in Glasgow on September 10. Competitio­ns, like anniversar­ies, can be odd affairs but are often full of revelation­s.

 ??  ?? Montreal’s new music specialist­s the Bozzini Quartet will open the Sound festival, which takes over Aberdeen and its environs from October 26 to November 11.
Montreal’s new music specialist­s the Bozzini Quartet will open the Sound festival, which takes over Aberdeen and its environs from October 26 to November 11.

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