The Scotsman

SCO & Andrew Manze

- KEN WALTON

City Halls, Glasgow

Andrew Manze’s SCO programme bore a workaday title – A Very British Adventure – but what an adventure it was. “Who’s heard of Grace Williams?”, Manze asked us. Very few. Born in Barry in 1906, and following studies with Vaughan Williams and Egon Wellesz, she settled on the Welsh coast, writing such locally-inspired gems as the Sea Sketches of 1944.

Manze’s infectious enthusiasm – his added concert commentari­es are always interestin­g and entertaini­ng – brushed off on the SCO, whose rich-scented performanc­es revealed music that criss-crossed so many prevailing influences – an intriguing marriage of modal English and progressiv­e Viennese – ultimately drenching themselves in the powerful multifacet­ed sea imagery of these five evocative pieces.

Anna Clyne’s The Years is more inward looking, written as a response to lockdown isolation

and premiered here as part of her role as SCO associate composer. It involved the SCO Chorus, whose articulati­on of Stephanie Fleischman­n’s text benefitted from Clyne’s pleasingly consonant vocal scoring as a gravitatio­nal counterwei­ght to the freer complexiti­es given to the orchestra.

Undoubted star of the second half was violist Timothy Rid out, whose performanc­e of br it ten’ sLachry mae, mercurial yet autumnally intoxicati­ng, was strengthen­ed by prefacing it with manze’ s own arrangemen­t of the Dowland song, “If my complaints could passions move”, on which the Britten is based. Rather than wait for the song to openly reveal itself at the end of the Britten, its immediate echoes drew out the subtler references we often miss at the start.

Ridout remained on stage for his leading role in Vaughan Williams’ Flos Campi, a celebrator­y nod to the 150th anniversar­y celebratio­ns of the composer’s birth.

 ?? ?? 0 Andrew Manze
0 Andrew Manze

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