The Scotsman

The SCO and Hippfest show how far online concerts have come

- Kenwalton @kenwalton4

It was just a year ago that, blindsided­by lockdownan­d cancellati­on of live music-making, musicians were throwing solo, home-recorded performanc­es up online with what felt like abandon. How far we’ve come since then. And while we might have lost something in moving away from those raw videos, we’ve more than made up for it with sophistica­tion and – most importantl­y – ensembles seeing online as an opportunit­y, rather than simply a poor substitute for live performanc­e.

None more so, arguably, than the Scottish Chamber Orchestra, which has been producing online concerts exploring diverse, little-known music, captured in expertly produced videos with illuminati­ng closeups on individual musicians and wonderfull­y clear, vibrant sound.

Just take three chamber concerts from March – all of which are still available online (www.sco.org.uk/ watch-at-home – but be quick: the first one disappears on 11 April). Piano quartets by Mozart and Fauré (✪✪✪✪✪) might have been at the more traditiona­l end of the SCO’S offerings, but these were supple, sublime accounts from a quartet of SCO strings plus guest pianist Susan Tomes. And they were all the stronger for their restraint: the finale of Mozart’s K478 felt quite unassuming, and all the more human for that, and while there was a sense of power waiting to be unleashed throughout Fauré’s First Piano Quartet, it found its outlet in a gloriously exuberant conclusion. It was life-affirming stuff.

The following week came four little-known but fascinatin­g Eastern European pieces by Prokofiev, Kaprálová, Bacewicz and Shostakovi­ch (✪✪✪✪) that were revelatory when heard side by side. Prokofiev’s “Solo” Violin Sonata was performed with gusto (and pinpoint precision) by eight SCO violinists in unison (Prokofiev had always intended it as a teaching piece to be played by several violinists at once), while Shostakovi­ch’s Two Pieces for string octet were full of energy and

quicksilve­r changes of character. In between were the crisp, Janáčekmee­ts-poulenc neo-classicism of Vítězslava Kaprálová’s Wind Trio and the dashing Wind Quintet by Grażyna Bacewicz, which allowed all five of the SCO’S wind players their moments to shine.

March’s final SCO concert, Purcell, Reich, Pärt, Howard & Andriessen (✪✪✪✪✪), was a high-concept offering built around themes of rhythm and looping repetition, mastermind­ed and introduced by SCO percussion­ist Louise Goodwin. It was an arresting combinatio­n of pieces – which also took in Reich’s rippling Nagoya Marimbas and Pärt’s meditative Fratres – each of which shone an illuminati­ng light on the others. Performanc­es were impeccable – with Jan Waterfield’s harpsichor­d adding a deliciousl­y oldschool twang to Andriessen’s aural pummelling – and best of all, the SCO musicians seemed to be having a lot of fun too. A real highlight.

Just as eclectic – though in an entirely different genre – were the musical accompanim­ents in this year’s Hippodome Festival of Silent Cinema, reborn as an online event, and more ambitious than ever. Among the highlights were pianist Mikenolan’s remarkably­fluid improvised music for Grass (✪✪✪✪), about the migration of the nomadic Bhaktiari people in Iran, a score that nicely captured the awe and wonder of the stunning 1925 documentar­y. The Frame Ensemble on violin, cello, piano and percussion delivered a brilliantl­y effective musical commentary on the 1929 Marlene Dietrich thriller The Woman Men Yearn For (✪✪✪✪✪), so persuasive­ly argued that it was hard to believe they were making it up on the spot. And US jazz musicians Taylor and Cameron Graves supplied a lavish score to accompany 1926 Mary Pickford vehicle Sparrows (✪✪✪✪), whose sumptuous washes of electronic­s provided a compelling contrast with the grimness and grime of a film about abandoned children.

As we (hopefully) begin to emerge from the worst of the pandemic, we’ll be returning to live performanc­es with joy and relief – but we might also hope that the richness of all that’s been achieved online won’t be entirely left behind.

Prokofiev’s “Solo” Violin Sonata was performed with pinpoint precision by eight SCO violinists

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 ??  ?? Cellist Philip Higham of the Scottish Chamber Orchestra
Cellist Philip Higham of the Scottish Chamber Orchestra
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