The Scotsman

Magnetic Alder’s swirling torrent of emotional extremes

- KEN WALTON Music at Paxton

While this year’s Music at Paxton festival, under new artistic director Angus Smith, is making explorativ­e forages later this week into the wider Berwickshi­re community, most of its busy programme remains self-contained within Paxton Estate and its elegant Palladian mansion.

It was there, on Saturday evening, in the well-stocked Picture Gallery that the voice of soprano Louise Alder (JJJJJ) surprised and delighted a packed audience.

Who is she? Alder studied at Edinburgh University and the Royal College of Music, and has developed her career – as so many bright British vocal talents do – in the German opera house system. On the evidence of a recital geared so well to illustrati­ng her mesmerisin­g musical diversity, Alder’s wider recognitio­n is guaranteed.

She performed with pianist Gary Matthewman, whose delicate understate­ment, generous and accommodat­ing, allowed this sweeping journey – from the crystallin­e clarity of Mozart and fragile tonality of Richard Strauss to the passionate heights and depths of Liszt and the fun and games of Verdi – to enthral.

Alder is a natural communicat­or: one minute the purist of pure, the next coquettish and quite the madam. Her movement, the fire in her eyes, deliver their own magnetic narrative to every corner of the room. And then the voice, limitless in power and ravishing in tone, instantly adaptable to the Mozartian finesse of An Chloë, the shadowy nuances of Fauré’s 5 Mélodies de Venise, the mercurial histrionic­s of Strauss’ Drei Lieder Der Ophelia, which shaped the opening half.

But it was in Liszt’s 3 Sonetti del Petrarca that the full force of Alder’s expressive power came into its own, a swirling torrent of emotional extremes contained in a thrilling unity of interpreta­tive thought. From there the direction was gently homeward – first in a restful pairing of Puccini songs, then some flirtatiou­s Verdi. Alder’s Quilter encore added a single satisfying English sign-off to a glorious programme.

If that was de rigueur for Paxton,theprecedi­ng5pm“aperitif ” in the garden marquee was not. Two young folk musicians working under the auspices of Live Music Now, fiddler Robbie Greig and Orcadian guitarist Owen Sinclair (JJJ), brought a fresh informalit­y to the evening, their mischievou­s intimacy lighting up an hour-long set of songs and dances perfect for the time of day, though a more spiced-up context would have lifted the atmosphere.

In the first of two appearance­s yesterday by the young Albion Quartet (JJJJ), a neat pairing of string quartets by Haydn and Mozart introduced us to an ensemble en route to being very good.

If anything showcased the instinctiv­eness of their playing it was Mozart’s first Prussian Quartet, K575, the cut and thrust of its adventurin­g textures captured excitedly in mood and action.

The preceding Haydn Op20 No5 seemed more like a warmup in comparison. It took until the final fugue for the same vital spark to ignite. Otherwise it seemed cautious and grounded.

Music at Paxton continues until tomorrow.

 ??  ?? 0 On this showing, Louise Alder’s wider recognitio­n is guaranteed
0 On this showing, Louise Alder’s wider recognitio­n is guaranteed
 ??  ?? 0 The festival is making explorativ­e forages later this week
0 The festival is making explorativ­e forages later this week

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