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SEEN AND HEARD UK CONCERT REVIEW
Battistelli: Fair is foul, foul is fair
Berio: Folk Songs
Harper: Pastoral (Ed./Arr. Cresswell), SCO commission, world premiere
Britten: Suite on English Folk Tunes (A time 
            there was) 
            
            New Romantics has been one of the key themes of this year's SCO 
            season. The four concerts have focused primarily on 20th 
            and 21st century composers and have featured three 
            premieres, but raging dissonances have been thin on the ground. 
            Instead the melodic impulse of each work has enabled their creators 
            to be labelled Romantic composers for our age. The same was true 
            tonight: Britten's wonderful folk song suite sat next to Berio's 
            charming Folk Songs and a world premiere from Edward 
            Harper. 
            
            Berio's Folk Songs are wonderfully appealing and show this 
            composer at his best. The main melodies are someone else's but the 
            arrangements are utterly distinctive and contain prominent parts for 
            solo instrumentalists. The opening song features a fantastic double 
            viola part while a haunting nocturnal harp line turns up in a few 
            songs. The reduced forces of the orchestra allowed the writing to 
            come through well, but there was a clear sense of fun when all 
            sections came together for the final Azerbaijani love song. Harper's
            Pastoral, on the other hand, was meant to the first 
            movement of his Third Symphony but the composer died in 
            2009 before he could finish it so what we heard tonight was a 
            realisation of the score from his friend and fellow composer Lyell 
            Cresswell. It's poignant and beautiful at the same time, using a 
            setting of Burns' Ye Banks and Braes as its 
            centrepiece, surrounding it with lovely string writing and a mix of 
            traditional as well as original tunes. Both these works featured the 
            fulsome mezzo of Susan Bickley, standing in for an indisposed Karen 
            Cargill. Her rich, lustrous voice was poignant and affecting in the 
            Burns setting but wonderfully versatile for the Berio songs: the 
            American settings which opened the cycle were straight and clear, 
            while the Mediterranean songs were more reckless. She sounded 
            positively coarse for the Sicilian A la femminisca, which 
            was entirely appropriate, but in every song, even the unashamedly 
            merry ones, it was the sultry intensity of her voice that made her 
            interpretation special.
            
            Britten's Folk Song suite, a world away from that of Vaughan 
            Williams, sounded great in the hands of these musicians. A band like 
            the SCO is perfect for Britten: their reduced forces mean that the 
            composer's fantastically inventive instrumentation gleams like 
            polished silver and every detail was clearly audible in radiant 
            detail tonight. The gorgeous harp effects in The Bitter Withy 
            and the stupendous cor anglais in Lord Melbourne are only 
            two examples, but when this final movement rose to an astonishing 
            climax the entire orchestra showed themselves capable of coming 
            together brilliantly. 
            
            Battistelli's Fair is Foul left me a little cold, though. 
            An Edinburgh International Festival commission from 2009, it takes 
            its inspiration from the blasted heath in the opening scene of 
            Macbeth and the 20-minute long piece is a spectral evocation of 
            a dark world. Right from the opening, featuring icy strings, muted 
            trumpets and electronic wind sounds, the composer is very skilful in 
            evoking a landscape of physical and emotional devastation. The tone 
            painting is masterly in the way surging strings portray the wildness 
            of the wind (or is it Macbeth's emotional terror?) and it's a 
            powerfully atmospheric piece. It's rather dependent on repetition, 
            however, particularly in runs of scales and glissandi, and it struck 
            me as moody rather than melodic so that, ultimately, there wasn't an 
            awful lot to it. Conductor Garry Walker seemed least comfortable 
            here, using anodyne gestures to mark time and entries but little 
            else. He relaxed as the evening wore on, though, and he was at his 
            most comfortable for the bumptious encore which the orchestra tore 
            through. 
            
            As the final concert in this New Romantics season this one 
            confirmed the importance of contemporary music in the SCO's 
            repertoire and reassured me that this is an orchestra that continues 
            to push boundaries and look for new things. Their new season will be 
            announced at the end of the month. Watch this space for details. 
            
            Simon Thompson
          
