The Scotsman

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The Edinburgh Internatio­nal Festival celebrated its 70th birthday in style, with a stellar programme of large-scale opera

- Kenwalton @kenwalton4

2017 was always going to be a year in which the classical music focus would be on Edinburgh, thanks to the 70th anniversar­y edition of the Edinburgh Internatio­nal Festival. Fergus Linehan’s celebrator­y programme didn’t disappoint. From high-end opera to crazy stunts like a Shostakovi­ch symphony played by the massed partnershi­p of a Russian and Scottish orchestra (the Mariinsky Orchestra and the RSNO), it was a festival to remember.

At its heart was an opera programme reflective of the genre’s significan­ce in defining the early history of the festival. Most importantl­y, though, it brought to Scotland grand opera in its most expansive manifestat­ion, something we can only dream about these days from our own cash-starved Scottish Opera.

Teatro Regio Torino’s two mega-production­s - Verdi’s Macbeth and Puccini’s La bohème – were a rare and memorable treat: the former “hell-bent on hitting you from all angles”, as I wrote, in its successful bid to embrace every possible dark emotion; the latter a brilliant fusion of the personal and the universal, Alex Ollé’s contempora­ry-edged production filmic in its ability to zoom in and out of its characters’ private worlds.

Then there were Gianandrea Noseda’s red-hot readings of both scores: a meaty, unfussy La bohème, and a bloodthirs­ty Macbeth that hit blistering temperatur­es in Piero

Pretti’s heart-stopping final act aria as Macduff.

Other operatic hits of the festival included a gritty staged production by Opera Ventures and Scottish Opera of Mark-anthony Turnage’s

Greek, and concert performanc­es by the Bergen Philharmon­ic Orchestra of Britten’s Peter Grimes, and of John Eliot Gardiner’s critically-acclaimed trilogy of Monteverdi operas with his Monteverdi Choir.

But the performanc­e everyone was talking about was Wagner’s Die

Walküre, a terrific night at the Usher Hall featuring among its sensationa­l cast the world class singers Karen Cargill and Bryn Terfel.

Linehan’s ambitious 70th anniversar­y programme not only symbolised the historical significan­ce of the festival but also cemented its position as a truly internatio­nal event that is in great artistic shape, contempora­ry in outlook, and deserving of a future that is wellsuppor­ted both politicall­y and financiall­y.

Elsewhere in Edinburgh in 2017, two major infrastruc­ture projects also had the potential to shape an exciting future for music in Scotland. The first of these involved plans by the charitable trust IMPACT Scotland and the Scottish Chamber Orchestra to build a new concert hall behind the current RBS building in St Andrew Square. The planning of the project has powered on this year, with the globally-renowned acousticia­n Yasuhisa Toyota and an auspicious team of architects in place to make the city’s long-awaited 1,000-seater medium scale auditorium a reality. It looks set to happen.

On the other hand, St Mary’s Music School’s funded plans to purchase the listed Royal High School and remodel it as a custom-built replacemen­t for its current cramped home in Edinburgh’s West End have been constantly frustrated this year by corporate obduracy and local government bureaucrac­y.

Although Duddingsto­n and Urbanist Hotels have now failed twice in presenting a rival planning bid to the city council, they are persisting, and, according to sources, have hired the same law firm that represente­d Donald Trump in Aberdeen to mount yet another appeal. The school and the Royal High’s Preservati­on Trust have created the Perfect Harmony Campaign to try and resolve things in their favour. As for the all-important heritage issue, the old Royal High was built as a school. Why not simply keep it that way?

If 2017 was very much business as usual for the performing companies, there was one particular note of sorrow. In November, Conrad Wilson, music critic of The Scotsman from 1963-91, died at the age of 85. As

At EIF’S heart was an opera programme reflective of the genre’s significan­ce in defining the early history of the festival

a staff writer for this newspaper, he chronicled music in Scotland during one of its truly golden periods: the renaissanc­e of the Scottish National Orchestra (now the RSNO) under the visionary baton of Alexander Gibson; the founding of Scottish Opera, also spearheade­d by Gibson; and the burgeoning school of homegrown composers who flourished in such a fertile creative landscape, and without whom the likes of James Macmillan might easily have chosen to find inspiratio­n and opportunit­y south of the border.

Wilson once told me he had been to every Edinburgh Festival since the very first in 1947. Ill health sadly diminished that record in recent years. The musical community in Scotland will miss his quiet authority and generous writing. ■

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 ??  ?? Verdi’s Macbeth, main, and Puccini’s La
bohème both by Teatro Regio were highlights of the year; the fate of the Royal High School, right, hangs in the balance; the late Conrad Wilson, music critic at The
Scotsman, 19631991, inset
Verdi’s Macbeth, main, and Puccini’s La bohème both by Teatro Regio were highlights of the year; the fate of the Royal High School, right, hangs in the balance; the late Conrad Wilson, music critic at The Scotsman, 19631991, inset
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