Scottish Chamber Orchestra/Manze review – MacMillan's doleful hunting trip

City Halls, Glasgow
Soloist Alec Frank-Gemmill gave a terrifically controlled and dramatic performance of James MacMillan’s new Concertino for Horn and Strings

James MacMillan’s new Concertino for Horn and Strings – I say new, but really it’s a souped-up version of his Horn Quintet (2007) – is like a doleful hunting trip played out in real-time theatrics. The soloist begins and ends nowhere to be seen: at the premiere, Alec Frank-Gemmill legged it from balcony to stage in time for his second entry then disappeared behind the back of the audience, repeating a sad little phrase until it was impossible to tell whether he was playing or not.

The concertino amounts to more than clever stage directions. If the traditional concerto soloist is heroic and the traditional horn part rallies the troops, MacMillan has created an antihero whose hunting calls are regretful and ultimately thwarted. Slight and striking preludes have been added to the original work – an un-MacMillanian lesson in less is more – with the violas setting the tone in a whispered quartet then a blistering passage for cellos and the SCO’s formidable principal bassist Nikita Naumov. Technically, the horn part doesn’t stretch Frank-Gemmill, but he played with terrific control and nuance.

In the rest of the programme – Britten’s Variations on a Theme of Frank Bridge, Beethoven’s Second Symphony – the strings sounded notably good. Limber, alert, energised. Andrew Manze was conducting, a violinist himself, but it wasn’t just that. This was the first concert in my memory where the SCO string seats were all filled by players appointed to fill them. It was a solid section, and sounded it.

Contributor

Kate Molleson

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra/James MacMillan – review

Erik Chisholm's dazzling Second Piano Concerto and James MacMillan's arresting The Confession of Isobel Gowdie were among highlights of this Commonwealth Day concert, writes Kate Molleson

Kate Molleson

11, Mar, 2014 @4:53 PM

Article image
Scottish Chamber Orchestra/Knussen – review

Playing the premiere of Ebb of Winter, Peter Maxwell Davies's latest reflection on Orkney's climate, the SCO found a wistful soundworld and added elegance for the rest of the programme, writes Kate Molleson

Kate Molleson

11, Nov, 2013 @12:57 PM

Article image
Scottish Chamber Orchestra/MacMillan review – Capperauld’s dance of death has style but lacks substance
Jay Capperauld’s macabre new work – Nutshell Studies of Unexplained Death – is full of orchestral colour but felt unresolved. The premiere was preceded by serene performances of Wagner and Ives

Rowena Smith

12, Nov, 2021 @1:44 PM

Article image
Mahler Chamber Orchestra/Uchida review – outstanding, crystalline Mozart
Conducting from the piano, Uchida’s alert phrasing and integration with the other instruments was totally absorbing, allowing the Mahler’s players to shine

Martin Kettle

30, Nov, 2016 @1:33 PM

Article image
MacMillan choral day review – an angry and affecting Stabat Mater
Barbican, London
Harry Christophers’ Sixteen and the Britten Sinfonia gave the world premiere of MacMillan’s powerful and haunting new choral work

Erica Jeal

17, Oct, 2016 @11:17 AM

Article image
Scottish Chamber Orchestra/Robin Ticciati/Paul Lewis – review

Ticciati's account of Schumann's Fourth highlighted rare gems of orchestral colour but made too much of fleeting detail, says Kate Molleson

Kate Molleson

22, Nov, 2013 @5:59 PM

Article image
SCO/Christophers review – premiere of James MacMillan's ecstatic Fifth Symphony
The latest symphony from the pre-eminent Scottish composer, a meditation on the Holy Spirit featuring a striking 20-voice motet, received a rapturous response

Rowena Smith

20, Aug, 2019 @8:54 AM

Article image
The Sixteen/Britten Sinfonia review – MacMillan's mysticism misses its mark
There was impeccable singing and playing, but James MacMillan’s substantial new works disappointed

Erica Jeal

16, Oct, 2019 @10:01 AM

Article image
Scottish Chamber Orchestra/Ticciati review
An awkward piece becomes captivating thanks to the perfect partnership of persuasive violinist and charismatic orchestra, writes Kate Molleson

Kate Molleson

19, Dec, 2014 @2:56 PM

Article image
Hallé Orchestra/Andrew Manze/ Francesco Piemontesi – review

The Hallé strings carried emotional power, while conductor Andrew Manze brought a glorious paean to an abrupt end, writes Rian Evans

Rian Evans

10, Mar, 2014 @4:07 PM