The Scotsman

RSNO tour showcases healthy ambition and solid soundscape

- KEN WALTON

While Scotland has struggled to shake off the late snows of winter this week, the RSNO has been basking in the red hot desert sun of Arizona and California during a tenday concert tour with musical director Thomas Søndergård.

What began with a relatively easeful couple of days in Tucson, and an opening concert at the University of Arizona’s Centennial Hall featuring a sensationa­l performanc­e from violinist Sandy Cameron (see Tuesday’s online review), has now accelerate­d to a daily dose of coach travel (eight hours of endless desert from Arizona, over the Colorado River, into California on Tuesday) and nightly performanc­es.

Concerts in the “snowflake” retirement haven of Palm Desert, in acoustics as dry as the desert sand, and then in the tastefully opulent Performing Arts Auditorium of Orange County’s Soka University, with superior acoustic design by Yasuhisa Toyota (the man responsibl­e for ensuring Edinburgh’s forthcomin­g new concert hall sounds its best), offered contrastin­g treatments of Rachmanino­v’s Rhapsody on a Theme of Paganini and Prokofiev’s Fifth Symphony.

In the latter hall, warmed by its more generous resonance, pianist Olga Kern’s powerhouse partnershi­p with the RSNO hit boiling point in the Rachmanino­v, Søndergård’s tight hold of the orchestral fireworks throwing out multicolou­red hues that set the performanc­e ablaze. His Prokofiev, depending less on the edge-of-the-seat bravado employed in Palm Desert to counterthe­dryness,hadamore solid warmth that reached to its innermost soul.

Soku University – one of Japan’s “super global universiti­es” – provided an apposite venue for the second performanc­e (the first was at the Usher Hall a few weeks ago) of the specially-commission­ed A Matter of Honour by 81-year-old film composer Paul Chihara. As a four-year-old living in wartime USA, Chihara was incarcerat­ed in a “relocation camp” for Japanese families living in America at the time. This eclectical­ly-styled work for narrator and orchestra, similar in concept and sentiment to Copland’s Lincoln Portrait and Schoenberg’s Asurvivori­nwarsaw,andusing an assortment of quotes alluding to prejudices then and reconcilia­tion now, is unashamedl­y personal and nostalgic.

As a backdrop to the texts, pointedly delivered by veteran actor Clyde Kusatsu, Chihara indulges in a world of ghostly reminiscen­ces – flashes of Japanese enka, popular American patriotic songs and big band classics of the time – that merge in a kind of Ivesian mist. There’s a cinematic fluidity to the music, even a catoonesqu­e spontaneit­y, calling on screaming razzmatazz one minute, ethereal impression­ism the next, but always an air of honesty that was strangely and powerfully captivatin­g.

Not all the tour activity has been in the concert hall. On Thursday a number of satellite initiative­s related to and involving members of the orchestra emerged, not least the exciting news that the dazzling Sandy Cameron’s new recording with the RSNO on Sony of Elfman’s Violin Concerto Eleven, Eleven is now on general release. It coincided with her second tour performanc­e in the 1,600-seater Soraya Hall in Northridge, a spacious venue filled to capacity as a result of the cult following Elfman enjoys in his home territory.

Despite the obvious derivative influences on this concerto, from John Adams to Shostakovi­ch and Prokofiev, it was Cameron’s alluring performanc­e style, a supercharg­ed energy coursing through every part of her body, from whiplash bow strokes to mesmerisin­g balletic footwork, that held it together and drew instant whoops and cheers.

Cameron will be in Scotland in November to perform Eleven, Eleven as part of the RSNO season, in a programme dedicated exclusivel­y to Elfman’s music, and conducted on that occasion by former Scottish Opera maestro John Mauceri.

Away from the nightly concert activity, four of the orchestra’s key principals – leader Maya Iwabuchi, flautist Katherine Bryan, trombonist Dávur Magnussen and tuba player John Whitener – spent much of Thursday in downtown Los Angeles, presenting masterclas­ses to conservato­ire students at the city’s Colburn School, part of a three-way partnershi­p involving those highly talented pupils, the RSNO and the Royal Conservato­ire of Scotland, where most of the players teach.

Associatio­ns like this help the orchestra build relationsh­ips that further its aspiration­s to make America a more regular tour destinatio­n, which is a strategic ambition of the RSNO. But it also provided a fascinatin­g insight into how deeply these RSNO players think about and apply their own musiciansh­ip – the power of relying on instinct (Magnussen), the importance of sound projection and taking a risk (Bryan), or the importance of recognisin­g the trajectory and destinatio­n of the musical phrase (Iwabuchi) – and how perceptive and selfassure­d that musiciansh­ip is.

Travelling with an orchestra offers a window into its fascinatin­g dynamics. This tour has shown the RSNO as a whole to be in rude health. It finishes in Davis, near Sacramento, tonight.

 ??  ?? Film composer Paul Chihara takes a bow after his specially commission­ed A Matter of Honour, for narrator and orchestra
Film composer Paul Chihara takes a bow after his specially commission­ed A Matter of Honour, for narrator and orchestra
 ??  ?? Olga Kern has a powerhouse partnershi­p with the RSNO
Olga Kern has a powerhouse partnershi­p with the RSNO

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