The Scotsman

RSNO: Enigma Variations Usher Hall, Edinburgh

- DAVID KETTLE

Young American violinist Benjamin Beilm an made a big impression with his immaculate Barber Violin Concerto with the SCO a couple of years ago. So expectatio­ns were high for his Sibelius with the larger forces of the RSNO – and it was no less spectacula­r.

Restless, muscular, agile and deeply passionate, it displayed his impeccable technique to glorious effect, and he played it as though recounting a complex narrative, vividly portraying all its characters and plot twists.

He is still only 29, and clearly a remarkable talent and, equally remarkably, he has been playing the Sibelius Concerto since his early teens. If there’s a downside, it’s that it felt quite a considered, serious- minded account–not least in his quite deliberate finale, which seldom ventured near the music’s skittish playfulnes­s.

But if it felt less than spontaneou­s, Beilm an more than made up for that with sheer fiddle showmanshi­p and unswerving commitment to the music – qualities equally on show in his witt y encore of Kreisler’s Recitative and Scherzo, whose fingerknot­ting virtuosity he dis

patched with nonchalant ease.

The RSNO was on fine form in Sibelius’ gritty orch estral writing, though conductor Elim Chan seemed sometimes too eager to push things on, missing a few opportunit­ies for drama along the way.

Kudos to the orchestra and conductor for their recently composed opener – the lyrical Endless Forms by Hong Kong-born Fung Lam – even if the results were less than immediatel­y memorable.

Ch an closed with a deftly delivered Elgar Enigma Variations, sharply characteri­sed though, as earlier, sometimes slightly breathless.

 ??  ?? 0 The RSNO was on fine form under conductor Elim Chan
0 The RSNO was on fine form under conductor Elim Chan

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