The Scotsman

Online Lammermuir captured time and place beautifull­y

- David kettle

As we grow ever more familiar with online concerts – whether we love or loathe them – the question changes from what we’re seeing to how we’re seeing it. With its “Autumn Special” collection of online concerts, the 2020 Lammermuir Festival has taken quite a sophistica­ted approach on the concept, with performanc­es filmed from several angles, TV- style presentati­on and incorporat­ed online programme notes. It’s impressive stuff, well thought through, and more importantl­y, with its videos drenched in early autumn light from Haddington’s Holy Trinity Episcopal Church, it also serves to convey the live festival’s spirit of beautiful music in beautiful places.

Most crucial, clearly, are the performanc­es themselves, and in focusing on artists who already have strong relationsh­ips with Lammermuir, co- artistic directors James Waters and Hugh Macdonald have not only gathered a gaggle of very fine musicians, but also generated a palpable generosity of spirit in their performanc­es. That was evident in an exquisite and very touching account of Prokofiev’s Five Melodies from violinist Chloë Hanslip and pianist Danny Driver ( ✪ ✪ ✪ ✪ ) on 8 September, in the first of four live simulcasts with BBC Radio 3, which beautifull­y captured the music’s strange beauty and spontaneit­y, as if the duo were making it up on the spot. If they might have taken things a little more simply in their opening Beethoven Violin Sonata in D, Op. 12 No. 1 ( his first), they made up for it with a luminous performanc­e of his final violin sonata, Op. 96 in G, which matched restraint with pinpoint precision, and an engaging playfulnes­s in its stop- start finale.

Tenor Joshua Ellicott, joined by pianist Anna Tilbrook ( ✪ ✪ ✪ ✪ ✪ ) , gave a glorious nature- themed recital the following day, beginning with three tender, thoughtful Schubert songs before blossoming into the more troubled romance of Schumann’s Op. 39 Liederkrei­s, which also allowed Ellicott’s lyric tenor to bloom into rich, radiant colours. They continued with five Vaughan Williams songs that rather magically matched visionary mysticism with a sturdy gruffness, and were all the more powerful as a result.

The multi- camera approach paid off brilliantl­y with the Navarra Quartet and cellist Philip Higham ( ✪ ✪ ✪ ✪ ✪ ) on 10 September, allowing quintet- wide shots as well as close- ups on individual players, and nicely choreograp­hed to Schubert’s String Quintet, which formed the entirety of their hour- long recital. It was a fascinatin­g, deeply human account – passionate and turbulent to the point of rawness in the opening movement and scherzo, yet alive with movement in its otherworld­ly slow movement too, and unafraid to expose the work’s precarious balance of hope and despair.

Pianist Roman Rabinovich ( ✪ ✪ ✪ ) brought the festival’s four lunchtime concerts to quite a hard- edged conclusion with a rather steelyfing­ered reading of Beethoven’s Appassiona­ta Sonata, probably not helped by close- miking. But by way of extreme contrast, Edinburgh guitarist Sean Shibe ( ✪ ✪ ✪ ✪ ✪ ) began the festival’s evening recitals with impeccable delicacy and nuance in a clutch of pieces from Scottish lute manuscript­s, before drawing a remarkable range of colour from his instrument in Mompou’s Canción y danza and slightly more fiery Suite Compostela­na. With his astonishin­g intensity and focus, Shibe can have you hanging on his every note – though he concluded with the raucous, ear- bending dissonance­s and uncompromi­sing power of Julia Wolfe’s LAD, which he’d transcribe­d for multitrack­ed guitars from its original version for massed bagpipes. It was at the other end of the sonic spectrum, maybe, but just as hypnotic in its siren- like slides.

The Navarra Quartet ( ✪ ✪ ✪ ✪ ✪ ) returned on 11 September in a perceptive performanc­e of Britten’s Venice- inspired Third Quartet, which captured the work’s elusive sense of decaying extravagan­ce to a tee, from restless duets in its opening movement to the endless repetition­s of its visionary finale, drawing heavily on Britten’s opera Death in Venice. Mozart’s Piano Concerto No. 12 – for which the Navarra players were joined by pianist Tom Poster – provided a sense of brilliant release, and a thoroughly convincing fiveplayer account that sparkled and tickled with freshness and fun, and felt like a true meeting of minds in its generous sense of give and take.

There’s been much to savour in the Lammermuir Festival’s online reinventio­n of itself, not least its persuasive adaptation to a digital format – and, even better, there’s the chance to enjoy the performanc­es again for two weeks after the daily events come to an end tomorrow.

To listen online, visit www.lammermuir­festival.co.uk

The multi- camera approach paid off brilliantl­y with the Navarra Quartet

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 ??  ?? Philip Higham played with the Navarra Quartet at the Lammermuir Festival
Philip Higham played with the Navarra Quartet at the Lammermuir Festival

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