Sir Simon Rattle and the London Symphony Orchestra opened their new season with an eclectic mix of British music that saw the charismatic conductor at his chimerical best and the orchestra at their most lustrous. A change of programme was necessary as it transpired that for various reasons, it was not possible to perform Julian Anderson new work Exciles in full. Instead, only two relatively short movements were premiered. The first, Le 3 mai, was a lush, Ravelian song for soprano and large orchestra. Lucy Crowe delivered the beautifully written vocal line with allure and precision. The more complex Tsiyon included a choir, the London Symphony Chorus, which sat aloft in the balcony on this occasion. The sophistication of the orchestral writing shone through. Overlaying this was a fiendishly intricate choral contribution, combined with a dramatic soprano line. These fascinating fragments only hinted at the ambitious scale of the work, which aims to draw in experiences relating to the pandemic. Orchestra and chorus were well rehearsed and confident in their realisation of Anderson’s rich sound world.
Two smaller works began proceedings, with Purcell's anthem Remember not, O Lord, our offences warming up the London Symphony Chorus exquisitely. Tippett’s Praeludium for brass, bells and percussion then added a totally idiomatic note of ceremony to the proceedings. This is the 1960s Tippett, finding something new and tougher to say. The LSO brass were glamorous and deeply resonant even in the dead Barbican acoustic.
Before the interval a Judith Weir masterpiece, Natural History, pulled all the threads together with gentle power. The four songs were characterised perfectly by Lucy Crowe, her beautiful translucent voice, free of unnecessary vibrato, shining above the deliciously subtle orchestration. This is music of concern and hope, always welcome in these times.