Outside St Ninian's Cathedral in Perth it was minus 8 deg C, and pavements round about were extremely difficult to use due to thick uneven layers of ice. Nevertheless, a decent crowd turned out for the welcome annual Candlelit Concert treat from The Scottish Ensemble at Christmastime: the Perth concert was the last of a tour of Scotland, and in a week of difficult weather and cancelled events, the Ensemble had somehow dodged the snow and played every concert.
As Jonathan Morton explained, these concerts at Christmas time are not always Christmassy, and in the centrepiece of a fine Czech programme, Janacek's Quartet No 1 - the Kreutzer Sonata, arranged for the Ensemble by Morton, was the certainly not festive. Based on Tolstoy's story of a jealous husband who murdered his wife because he thought, mistakenly, that she was having an affair with the violinist whom she accompanied playing Beethoven's Kreutzer's Sonata. The tale is told by a narrator on a train, as we hear the rhythmic clack of the wheels in the music from time to time. Janacek visited turbulent themes in his operas, and was so taken by this story that he wrote the piece in only eight days. In stark contrast to the evening's bookended Dvorak pieces, this was splendidly spiky dissonant high energy music and just the musical territory the Ensemble likes to really get its teeth into playing. The story was well told, with a special highlight being a duet between Jonathan Morton and Alison Lawrance on 'cello in the third movement.
The piece was arranged by Morton from a string quartet, and I wonder whether the original would have had as much impact as this performance without the added double bass and other instruments.