The Scotsman

BBC SCO Martyn Brabbins and Lucas and Arthur Jussen

City Halls, Glasgow

- KEN WALTON

THE BBC SSO’S journey through the symphonies of Michael Tippett, under Martyn Brabbins’ judicious direction, has been fascinatin­g to behold. It was the turn of Symphony No 4 on Thursday, a work that few will have heard live, and which proved, in a performanc­e full of selfbelief, to be both compelling and puzzling at the same time.

As a composer for whom “metaphor” was the prevailing embryo of his creative process – I recall him talking extensivel­y about this at a talk in Glasgow in the 1980s – the preoccupat­ion here is the concept of life itself, from birth to death. Heavy breathing from an electronic tape (specially produced for this occasion by Ian Dearden of Sound Intermedia) frames the continuous half-hour work symbolisin­g life’s inevitable cycle.

The score is wonderfull­y intense, Tippett’s contrapunt­al wizardry capturing pungency and sparkle in equal measure. Brabbins’ fused these together in a bejewelled tapestry, eliciting an electrifyi­ng clarity and charisma from the SSO. While we revelled in such kaleidosco­pic delights, there was the challenge, too, of making total sense of the work. I’m not convinced one hearing was enough, and I certainly want to hear it again when the SSO’S CD is released.

The concert opened with a breathtaki­ngly beautiful account of Debussy’s Prélude à l’après-midi d’un faune. Then Dutch pianists, brothers Lucas and Arthur Jussen, looking every bit like classical music’s Jedward, brought flare and instinctiv­e collusion to Mozart’s Concerto in E flat for Two Pianos, followed by a Bizet encore that brought the house down.

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