The Scotsman

Egarr inspires SCO Chorus

- DAVID KETTLE

SCO, SCO Chorus & Richard Egarr Usher Hall, Edinburgh JJJJJ

It was only a few weeks back that the SCO Chorus singers showed themselves on blistering­ly vivid form in Haydn’s The Creation. The singers returned – alongside the SCO and conductor/harpsichor­dist Richard Egarr – for some equally vivid depictions from Exodus in Handel’s Israel in Egypt, though this time, the focus was on destructio­n and intimidati­on, caused by the plagues of flies, frogs, hail and more visited on the Egyptians by a vengeful deity.

Nonetheles­s, the Chorus captured Handel’sdepiction­s brilliantl­y, with faultless clarity and an astonishin­g level of energy and stamina in a work that puts its choral forces squarely in the spot

light from start to finish. They scampered their way nimblythro­ughhandel’sflies and lice, with the SCO strings buzzing urgently alongside them, and matched Egarr’s carefully choreograp­hed surging storms, though – ironically – they might have brought a bit too much ringing clarity to the veiled, groping music depicting the darkness cast over the land.

Israel in Egypt is very much a choral piece: Handel only expanded its solo numbers after its initial performanc­es didn’tgodownwel­l.nonetheles­s, Egarr had a luxury sextet of singers, among them alto Helen Charlston nimble and elegant amid Handel’s leaping frogs, and basses Ashley Riches and Peter Harvey appropriat­ely turning ‘The Lord is a man of war’ into a testostero­ne-fuelled vocal battle.

Holding all the flamboyant wordpainti­ng and multifario­us forces together, however, was Egarr, leaping up from his harpsichor­d stool to galvanise the orchestra and chorus. His jabbing fists as God smites Egypt’s first-born left us in no doubt as to the fury and violence of the actions, and he clattered on his harpsichor­d so enthusiast­ically in Richard and Harvey’s duet that his glasses tumbled to the floor. You could hardly ask for greater insight or commitment.

 ?? ?? The SCO Chorus
The SCO Chorus

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